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AMD Accelerated Processing Unit (APU), formerly known as Fusion, is a series of 64-bit microprocessors from Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), combining a general-purpose AMD64 central processing unit and 3D integrated graphics processing unit (IGPU) on a single die.
This is a list of microprocessors designed by AMD containing a 3D integrated graphics processing unit (iGPU), including those under the AMD APU (Accelerated Processing Unit) product series. Features overview
Concrete products are codenamed "Llano": List of AMD accelerated processing units. Llano AMD Fusion ( K10 cores + Redwood -class GPU) (launch Q2 2011, this is the first AMD APU) uses Socket FM1 Bulldozer architecture; Bulldozer, Piledriver, Steamroller, Excavator (2011–2017)
The MI300A is an accelerated processing unit (APU) that integrates 24 Zen 4 CPU cores with four CDNA 3 GPU cores, resulting in a total of 228 CUs in the GPU section, and 128 GB of HBM3 memory. The Zen 4 CPU cores are based on the 5 nm process node and support the x86-64 instruction set, as well as AVX-512 and BFloat16 extensions.
AMD Piledriver Family 15h is a microarchitecture developed by AMD as the second-generation successor to Bulldozer.It targets desktop, mobile and server markets. It is used for the AMD Accelerated Processing Unit (formerly Fusion), AMD FX, and the Opteron line of processors.
The Fusion was later renamed the AMD APU (Accelerated Processing Unit). [133] Llano was AMD's first APU built for laptops. Llano was the second APU released, [134] targeted at the mainstream market. [133] It incorporated a CPU and GPU on the same die, and northbridge functions, and used "Socket FM1" with DDR3 memory.
At its heart are more than 44,000 AMD chips called accelerated processing units (APUs), which combine elements of CPUs and GPUs in the same chip. When Su heard the news that El Capitan had ...
Bobcat cores are used together with GPU cores in accelerated processing units (APUs) under the "Fusion" brand. [3] [4] A simplified architecture diagram was released at AMD's Analyst Day in November 2009. This is similar in concept with earlier AMD research in 2003, [5] detailing the specifications and advantages of extending x86 "everywhere".