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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.
1.0.0.7 Limits SoC voltage to a maximum of 1.3 volts May 2023 1.0.0.6 Bugfixes April 2023 1.0.0.5 Patch C Support for Ryzen 7000X3D March 2023 1.0.0.4 Support for Ryzen 7000 with 65 Watt January 2023 1.0.0.3 Patch A Improved GPU compatibility for GeForce RTX 40 series, Optimize for AMD Ryzen Master Utility September 2022 1.0.0.3
no LVDS, Powerplay 7.0 AMD M690 chipset RS690M Radeon X1250 (350 MHz) DirectX 9.0, AVIVO, DVI/HDCP, no HDMI, Powerplay 7.0 AMD M690E chipset RS690T Athlon Neo, Mobile Sempron Radeon X1250 (350Mhz) No DirectX 9.0, AVIVO, 2× HDMI/HDCP, Powerplay 7.0 AMD M690T chipset Turion 64 X2, Athlon 64 X2 mobile: Radeon X1270 (400Mhz) DirectX 9.0, AVIVO ...
Ryzen uses the "Zen" CPU microarchitecture, a redesign that returned AMD to the high-end CPU market after a decade of near-total absence since 2006. [6] AMD's primary competitor, Intel, had largely dominated this market segment starting from the 2006 release of their Core microarchitecture and the Core 2 Duo. [7]
Ryzen 5 7600 Ryzen 7 7700 Ryzen 9 7900 6/8/12 3700–3800 (5100–5400 boost) April 2023 Ryzen 7 7800X3D 8 4200 (5000 boost) 96 MB February 2023 Ryzen 9 7900X3D Ryzen 9 7950X3D 12/16 4200–4400 (5600–5700 boost) 96+32 MB March 2023 Phoenix Ryzen 7040 6/8 3800–4300 (5000–5200)
As of 2019, AMD's Ryzen processors were reported to outsell Intel's consumer desktop processors. [185] At CES 2020 AMD announced their Ryzen Mobile 4000, as the first 7 nm x86 mobile processor, [vague] the first 7 nm 8-core (also 16-thread) high-performance mobile processor, and the first 8-core (also 16-thread) processor for ultrathin laptops ...
The X370 chipset supports multiple graphics cards. But the number of available PCIe lanes depends on the CPU/APU. Support for Zen (including Zen+, Zen 2 and Zen 3) based family of CPUs and APUs (Ryzen, Athlon), as well as for some A-Series APUs and Athlon X4 CPUs (Bristol Ridge based on the Excavator microarchitecture)
AMD has not used K-nomenclature codenames in official AMD documents and press releases since the beginning of 2005, when K8 described the Athlon 64 processor family. AMD now refers to the codename K8 processors as the Family 0Fh processors. 10h and 0Fh refer to the main result of the CPUID x86 processor instruction.