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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.
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.
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 2 is a computer processor microarchitecture by AMD.It is the successor of AMD's Zen and Zen+ microarchitectures, and is fabricated on the 7 nm MOSFET node from TSMC.The microarchitecture powers the third generation of Ryzen processors, known as Ryzen 3000 for the mainstream desktop chips (codename "Matisse"), Ryzen 4000U/H (codename "Renoir") and Ryzen 5000U (codename "Lucienne") for ...
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. No integrated graphics. L1 cache: 64 KB per core (32 KB data + 32 KB instruction). L2 cache: 512 KB per core. Fabrication process: TSMC 7FF.
Ryzen 3 Pro 2100GE [80] 3.2 1000 384 2019: Ryzen 3 2200GE: 4 (4) 3.6 Vega 8 512:32:16 8 CU 1100 1126 Apr 19, 2018: Ryzen 3 Pro 2200GE: May 10, 2018: Ryzen 3 2200G: 3.5 3.7 65 W Feb 12, 2018: US $99 [81] Ryzen 3 Pro 2200G: May 10, 2018: OEM Ryzen 5 2400GE: 4 (8) 3.2 3.8 RX Vega 11 704:44:16 11 CU 1250 1760 35 W Apr 19, 2018: Ryzen 5 Pro 2400GE ...
Athlon is a family of CPUs designed by AMD, targeted mostly at the desktop market.The name "Athlon" has been largely unused as just "Athlon" since 2001 when AMD started naming its processors Athlon XP, but in 2008 began referring to single core 64-bit processors from the AMD Athlon X2 and AMD Phenom product lines.
The Athlon 64 X2 is the first native dual-core desktop central processing unit (CPU) designed by Advanced Micro Devices (AMD). It was designed from scratch as native dual-core by using an already multi-CPU enabled Athlon 64, joining it with another functional core on one die, and connecting both via a shared dual-channel memory controller/north bridge and additional control logic.