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RDNA 2 is a GPU microarchitecture designed by AMD, released with the Radeon RX 6000 series on November 18, 2020. Alongside powering the RX 6000 series, RDNA 2 is also featured in the SoCs designed by AMD for the PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, and Steam Deck consoles.
RDNA 2 [20] (also RDNA2) [21] is the successor to the RDNA microarchitecture. It was first publicly announced in early 2020 with a projected release in Q4 2020. [21] [22] According to statements from AMD, RDNA 2 would be a "refresh" of the RDNA architecture. [23] More information about RDNA 2 was made public on AMD's Financial Analyst Day on ...
[1] [2] In December 2024, an AMD advertising campaign tie-in with Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 on Reddit showed a Ryzen 9 processor and what appeared to be the Radeon RX 9070 XT reference design. [3] The Radeon RX 9000 series and RDNA 4 architecture were officially previewed on January 6, 2025 during AMD's CES keynote in Las Vegas. [4]
Integrated custom ARM Cortex-A5 co-processor [45] with TrustZone Security Extensions [46] in select APU models, except the Performance APU models. [47] Select models support Hybrid Graphics technology by using a Radeon R7 240 or R7 250 discrete graphics card. [48] Display controller: AMD Eyefinity 2, 4K Ultra HD support, DisplayPort 1.2 Support ...
The Radeon RX 6000 series is a series of graphics processing units developed by AMD, based on their RDNA 2 architecture. [2] It was announced on October 28, 2020 [3] and is the successor to the Radeon RX 5000 series.
CDNA (Compute DNA) is a compute-centered graphics processing unit (GPU) microarchitecture designed by AMD for datacenters. Mostly used in the AMD Instinct line of data center graphics cards, CDNA is a successor to the Graphics Core Next (GCN) microarchitecture; the other successor being RDNA (Radeon DNA), a consumer graphics focused microarchitecture.
The Navi GPUs are the first AMD GPUs to use the new RDNA architecture, [6] whose compute units have been redesigned to improve efficiency and instructions per clock (IPC). It features a multi-level cache hierarchy, which offers higher performance, lower latency, and less power consumption compared to the previous series.
Video Core Next is AMD's successor to both the Unified Video Decoder and Video Coding Engine designs, [1] which are hardware accelerators for video decoding and encoding, respectively. It can be used to decode, encode and transcode ("sync") video streams, for example, a DVD or Blu-ray Disc to a format appropriate to, for example, a smartphone .