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The Ryzen family is an x86-64 microprocessor family from AMD, based on the Zen microarchitecture.The Ryzen lineup includes Ryzen 3, Ryzen 5, Ryzen 7, Ryzen 9, and Ryzen Threadripper with up to 96 cores.
Ryzen 5 5625C January 2022: Ryzen 7 5825U 8 2000 (4500 boost) April 2022: Ryzen 7 PRO 5875U May 2022: Ryzen 7 5825C January 2023 Barcelo-R Ryzen 7030 4/6/8 2000–2300 (4300–4500) 8–16 MB March 2021: Milan EPYC 7003 series 8/16/24/28/32/48/56/64 2000–3700 (3450–4100 boost) 64–256 MB (16–32 MB per CCD/CCX) Socket SP3: Octa-channel ...
AMD Zen 3+ Family 19h – 2022 revision of Zen 3 used in Ryzen 6000 mobile processors using a 6 nm process. AMD Zen 4 Family 19h – fourth generation Zen architecture, in 5 nm process. [5] Used in Ryzen 7000 consumer processors on the new AM5 platform with DDR5 and PCIe 5.0 support. Adds support for AVX-512 instruction set.
This article gives a list of AMD microprocessors, sorted by generation and release year.If applicable and openly known, the designation(s) of each processor's core (versions) is (are) listed in parentheses.
[4] [5] [6] It is the successor to Zen 3 and uses TSMC's N6 process for I/O dies, N5 process for CCDs, and N4 process for APUs. [7] Zen 4 powers Ryzen 7000 performance desktop processors (codenamed "Raphael"), Ryzen 8000G series mainstream desktop APUs (codenamed "Phoenix"), and Ryzen Threadripper 7000 series HEDT and workstation processors ...
Ryzen 3 PRO 2100GE [2] found in some OEM markets in limited quantities. Ryzen (/ ˈ r aɪ z ən / RY-zən) [3] is a brand [4] of multi-core x86-64 microprocessors, designed and marketed by AMD for desktop, mobile, server, and embedded platforms, based on the Zen microarchitecture.
Zen 3 was released on November 5, 2020, [30] using a more matured 7 nm manufacturing process, powering Ryzen 5000 series CPUs and APUs [30] (codename "Vermeer" (CPU) and "Cézanne" (APU)) and Epyc processors (codename "Milan"). Zen 3's main performance gain over Zen 2 is the introduction of a unified CCX, which means that each core chiplet is ...
Zen+ is the name for a computer processor microarchitecture by AMD.It is the successor to the first gen Zen microarchitecture, [3] and was first released in April 2018, [4] powering the second generation of Ryzen processors, known as Ryzen 2000 for mainstream desktop systems, Threadripper 2000 for high-end desktop setups and Ryzen 3000G (instead of 2000G) for accelerated processing units (APUs).