The editors of PC Games Hardware comment on current events or developments in the world of PC hardware, the IT industry, games, technology or entertainment. Read the truly personal opinions of the PCGH editors, today on the topic “AMD Ryzen 7000…”
The “Internal editorial” format gives you an insight into the editorial team far away from a webcam, magazine column or videos. Each PCGH editor gives their personal commentary on a topical issue here. We not only cover the whole world of PC hardware, but also games including current console titles, films and technology in general – which influences our daily life in a variety of ways. Redaktion Intern appears regularly at the weekend. The topic this time:
AMD Ryzen 7000…
Background: AMD Ryzen 7000
As part of the Computex keynote, AMD announced its plans for Zen 4 and Ryzen 7000, among other things. Perhaps the most important information: AMD now speaks of autumn 2022 as the release period for the first processors and the AM5 desktop platform. With Ryzen 7000, which introduces a new PCH (X670) along with a new socket (LGA1718) and various new technologies such as DDR5 memory and PCI Express 5.0, AMD says it wants to maintain or expand its leadership position in desktop PCs. The basis is the processor microarchitecture called Zen 4. With Zen 4, the L2 cache per core is doubled flat, so there is now 1 MiB and no longer 512 KiB per core. Additional instructions revolve around AI acceleration, among other things. Thanks to TSMC’s optimized 5 nm manufacturing process, the cores should clock at well over 5 GHz – frequencies of around 5.5 GHz have already been seen in a demo. Overall, there should be a total of 15 percent higher single-thread performance compared to Zen 3 (Ryzen 5000). This is achieved through a combination of IPC and clock frequency. Read bluntly what the PCGH editors say about the Ryzen 7000 presentation in the picture gallery.
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