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Single PCIe 2.0 x16 AMD 780V chipset RS780C 55 Radeon 3100 No SB700, SB710, SB750 DirectX 10, AVIVO HD, HDMI/HDCP, DisplayPort/DPCP, OR single PCIe 2.0 x16 AMD 780G chipset RS780I Radeon HD 3200 Hybrid DirectX 10, UVD+, HDMI/HDCP, DisplayPort/DPCP, Side-port memory, OR single PCIe 2.0 x16 AMD M780V chipset RS780MC Mobile Turion, Mobile Athlon ...
The chipset series is targeted in three markets: the workstation/server market, the desktop market and the notebook market. Current information about the chipset series is very scarce, while the officially published information about the series is the server chipsets with two variants available, the AMD 890S chipset and the AMD 870S chipset, all of them paired with the SB700S series ...
All AMD FX microprocessors are unlocked and overclockable. Two Integers-Clusters (seen as logical cores from OS) in each Bulldozer Module. 4 Bulldozer modules within FX-8 series, 3 in FX-6 series, and 2 in FX-4 series. All models support up to 4 DIMMs of DDR3-1866 memory.
Mac Pro (Early 2009) 2.66–3.33 4×256 8 1 4 Yes Yes Yes March 2009 July 2010 Xeon 5500 ("Gainestown") Mac Pro (Early 2009) 2.26–2.93 4×256 8 2 4 Yes Yes Yes March 2009 August 2010 Xserve (Early 2009) 2.26–3.33 4×256 8 1–2 4 Yes Yes Yes April 2009 January 2011 Core i5 ("Lynnfield") iMac (Late 2009) 2.66–2.80 4×256 8 1 4 No No Yes
Socket FM2 is a CPU socket used by AMD's desktop Trinity and Richland APUs to connect to the motherboard as well as Athlon X2 and Athlon X4 processors based on them. FM2 was launched on September 27, 2012. [1] Motherboards which feature the at the time new FM2 CPU socket also utilize AMD's at the time new A85X chipset. [2]
AMD FX are a series of high-end AMD microprocessors for personal computers which debuted in 2011, claimed as AMD's first native 8-core desktop processor. [1] The line was introduced with the Bulldozer microarchitecture at launch (codenamed "Zambezi"), and was then succeeded by its derivative Piledriver in 2012 (codenamed "Vishera").
AMD's Genoa processors contain up to 96 Zen 4 cores compared to Milan's maximum of 64 cores. In support of Genoa's 96 cores, AMD introduced the SP5 socket with 2022 more contact pins than the SP3 socket to provide greater power delivery and signal integrity. SP5 can provide a peak power of up to 700 W. [2]
While the SP3 server socket does not require a chipset, instead utilizing a system-on-a-chip design, TR4 and its successor HEDT sockets require a chipset to unlock the features of the CPU. For TR4, the AMD X399 chipset was released, which allows a total of 64 PCIe 3.0 lanes for quad SLI / CrossFire configurations.