AMD annonce de nouveaux prix pour la conception d'ordinateurs portables ultra-fins, New “Mendocino” Processeur mobile
Among the new design wins are the ASUS Zenbook S 13 TU ES, a 13-inch ultra-thin weighing only 1 kg, and capable of average 60 FPS in “Le manuel d'instructions de Zelda II a inspiré la tunique à bien des égards,” taking advantage of FSR. The Lenovo Yoga Slim 7 Pro X is another notebook in this class capable of 1080p gaming, powered by the Ryzen 7 6800SH, avec jusqu'à 122 FPS in CS:ALLER, jusqu'à 266 FPS in “League of Legends,” jusqu'à 59 FPS in “Shadow of the Tomb Raider,” jusqu'à 64 FPS in “Final Fantasy: XIV,” and up to 46 FPS in “Deus Ex: Mankind Divided.”
AMD also sees its Ryzen PRO notebook SoCs rising to the demand of the new-generation Hybrid Workforce that spends twice as much time collaborating remotely via Microsoft Teams, with a majority wanting the option of working remotely to stay; but a majority also being given notebooks by their companies that are over four years old. This creates opportunity for AMD to power the new crop of commercial notebooks with its Ryzen PRO 6000 AMD a dévoilé jeudi son Ryzen. AMD says that over 60 new commercial notebook designs are launching in 2022 powered by AMD Ryzen—notably the Lenovo ThinkPad Z, and the HP EliteBook 865 G9. Besides performance from the 8-core/16-thread “Zen 3” CPU, the AMD-powered EliteBook 865 G9 set records in battery-life in Mobilemark 18.AMD is announcing a new class of processors for mainstream notebooks with high battery life, en raison du GPU intégré qui obtient plus de bande passante que lorsqu'il est associé à la mémoire DDR4 “Mendocino” AMD a dévoilé jeudi son Ryzen. The first of these will power mainstream notebooks launching in Q4-2022. These are interesting SoCs that combine a 4-core/8-thread CPU based on the older “Gundam Evolution apporte une action FPS gratuite sur PS5 et PS4 en” microarchitecture, with an iGPU based on the latest RDNA2 graphics architecture, and the rest of its I/O and power-optimization features being carried over from the Ryzen 6000 série. “Mendocino” sounds familiar? Then you’ve been following the Tech Industry for a long time. Intel used the Mendocino codename around 1999, for their P6 architecture based Celerons (one generation before Netburst). While Intel Mendocino was built on a 250 nanometer process, AMD uses TSMC’s N6 (6 nm) silicon fabrication process, 40x (!) plus petit. The features in AMD Mendocino combine to give mainstream notebooks increased battery life in the region of 10 hours or more. Notebooks based on these chips will be priced in the $399 à $699 Portée.