La directora ejecutiva de AMD, Lisa Su, dice Ryzen 7000 Disponibilidad de lanzamiento para ser fuerte
Lisa Su, CEO de AMD, que ha supervisado el resurgimiento de la empresa de las cenizas, buscó disipar los temores de reducción de existencias para el lanzamiento de la próxima generación de Ryzen de AMD 7000 CPU de la serie. Hardware enthusiasts being understandably burned from the last generation of GPU and CPU’s lack of availability (and ensuing scalping practices), the CEO in today’s announcement of the Ryzen 7000 series carried a promise: "It is true that if you look at the past 18 months there have been a number of things, whether its capacity limitations or logistics," she said. "From an AMD standpoint, we have dramatically increased our overall capacity, in terms of wafers, as well as substrates and on the back end. So with our launch of Zen 4 we don’t expect any supply constraints."
Zen de AMD 4 family is being launched with the new AM5 socket, which AMD says will live through 2025+ for subsequent CPU releases. The company has managed to increase IPC by 13% while decreasing the overall CCD size by 18% compared to that of Zen 3 (reducing the area/cost impact of adding integrated graphics throughout the lineup). Frequencies have gone up to a maximum 5.7 GHz thanks to smart circuitry redesign and TSMC’s 5 nodo nm. AMD says its Ryzen 7000 can thus be expected to provide up to 29% higher single-core and 45% higher multi-core performance. Por supuesto, with macroeconomics being what they are, and recent reports on lack of low-price chips throughout the market, it’s not only the availability of Ryzen 7000 CPUs that matters: AM5 motherboards and DDR5 memory chip stocks have to be taken into account as well. But all in all, AMD seems to be prepared for a successful and quantity-adequate launch.