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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. All consumer desktop Ryzens (except PRO models) and all mobile processors with the HX suffix have an unlocked multiplier.
Zen 3 is the last microarchitecture before AMD switched to DDR5 memory and new sockets, which are AM5 for the desktop "Ryzen" chips alongside SP5 and SP6 for the EPYC server platform and sTRX8. [3] According to AMD, Zen 3 has a 19% higher instructions per cycle (IPC) on average than Zen 2.
Zen is a family of computer processor microarchitectures from AMD, first launched in February 2017 with the first generation of its Ryzen CPUs. It is used in Ryzen (desktop and mobile), Ryzen Threadripper (workstation and high end desktop), and Epyc (server).
Ryzen AI is the brand name for AMD's AI technology, based on intellectual property from AMD's acquisition of Xilinx. [26] AMD Ryzen AI can work across a Neural Processing Unit (NPU) powered by XDNA architecture, a Radeon graphics engine, and Ryzen processor cores. [ 27 ]
Common features of Ryzen 5000 desktop CPUs: Socket: AM4. All the CPUs support DDR4-3200 in dual-channel mode.; All the CPUs support 24 PCIe 4.0 lanes. 4 of the lanes are reserved as link to the chipset.
On PassMark's Single thread performance test the Ryzen 5 5600x bested all other CPUs besides the Ryzen 9 5950X. [190] In April 2020, AMD launched three new SKUs which target commercial HPC workloads & hyperconverged infrastructure applications.
Passmark's OSFMount supports the creation of RAM disks, and also allows you to mount local disk image files (bit-for-bit copies of a disk partition) in Windows with a drive letter. OSFMount is a free utility designed for use with PassMark OSForensics. [16]
Phoronix Test Suite (PTS) is a free and open-source benchmark software for Linux and other operating systems. The Phoronix Test Suite, developed by Michael Larabel and Matthew Tippett, has been endorsed by sites such as Linux.com, [2] LinuxPlanet, [3] and Softpedia. [4]