VirtualLarry
No Lifer
- Aug 25, 2001
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Wow, Memory benchmarks (AIDA64) seem to scale with Memory clock all the way up to DDR4-4400. Very impressive, AMD.Also tested by Reous - hardwareluxx.de.
Wow, Memory benchmarks (AIDA64) seem to scale with Memory clock all the way up to DDR4-4400. Very impressive, AMD.Also tested by Reous - hardwareluxx.de.
I wonder if the desktop chips see the same effects.
No.Are these going to be available at retail any time in 2020?
Model | TDP Range | CPU Core / Thread Count | CPU Base Freq. GHz | 1T CPU Boost Freq. GHz @80C (Up to)* | Radeon Graphics Compute Unit Count | Graphics Freq. GHz (up to max) | Max # of simultaneous displays | L2 Cache | DRAM ECC |
V2748 | 35-54W | 8 / 16 | 2.9 GHz | 4.25 GHz | 7 | 1.6 GHz | 4 | 4 MB | 3200 |
V2546 | 35-54W | 6 / 12 | 3.0 GHz | 3.95 GHz | 6 | 1.5 GHz | 4 | 3 MB | 3200 |
V2718 | 10-25W | 8 / 16 | 1.7 GHz | 4.15 GHz | 7 | 1.6 GHz | 4 | 4 MB | 3200 |
V2516 | 10-25W | 6 / 12 | 2.1 GHz | 3.95 GHz | 6 | 1.5 GHz | 4 | 3 MB | 3200 |
So, there's apparently not enough of a market, or enough available volume in production, to justify formally releasing Renoir desktop APUs to the general market, but there's enough demand for AMD to release an embedded version to companies that want to make what are essentially the same products that many of us would like to make, mini-ITX and mini PCs for use in space constrained or entertainment center environments. I guess that they are satisfied with the grey market they are seeing for the pro models.
So, there's apparently not enough of a market, or enough available volume in production, to justify formally releasing Renoir desktop APUs to the general market, but there's enough demand for AMD to release an embedded version to companies that want to make what are essentially the same products that many of us would like to make, mini-ITX and mini PCs for use in space constrained or entertainment center environments. I guess that they are satisfied with the grey market they are seeing for the pro models.
Can't everything be explained with margins? Cultivating OEM business is a good multiplicator for further demand.So, there's apparently not enough of a market, or enough available volume in production, to justify formally releasing Renoir desktop APUs to the general market, but there's enough demand for AMD to release an embedded version to companies that want to make what are essentially the same products that many of us would like to make, mini-ITX and mini PCs for use in space constrained or entertainment center environments. I guess that they are satisfied with the grey market they are seeing for the pro models.
Thing is, even OEMs are seemingly not interested in Renoir desktop. Between Dell, Lenovo and HP I only see 2 models available. There were 4-5 desktops with Renoir mobile.
The virus might be playing a role in that.
Could AMD be trying to gain corporate desktop market-share with their Renoir desktop APU PCs?The star deal is the 4700g version. $540 nets you the 4700g, 16GN 3200 dual channel ram, 1TB HDD +256GB ssd. That's a nicer system than what I have on my work desktop no, and it costs half of what mine did 18 months ago.
Although now it is "temporarily unavailable". Must be hard to keep in stock.The star deal is the 4700g version. $540 nets you the 4700g, 16GN 3200 dual channel ram, 1TB HDD +256GB ssd. That's a nicer system than what I have on my work desktop no, and it costs half of what mine did 18 months ago.