AMD’s new Radeon RX 6500 XT and RX 6400 graphics cards target the much-neglected mainstream and budget GPU markets, helped by high clock speeds and TSMC’s 6nm process.
Despite CES being a consumer-oriented show—it’s right in the name, after all—HP’s taking the chance to announce that its “Elite” lineup of business laptops is getting an AMD-powered adjunct. Its extant EliteBook 8xx series and ProBook 4xx series laptops will be refreshed with the latest Ryzen hardware, while the company is introducing an EliteBook
2021 was a big year for graphics, despite all the shortages, in large part thanks to dueling upscaling technologies. While NVIDIA’s Deep Learning Super Sampling gets a lot of attention, Fidelity FX Super Resolution knocked our socks off thanks to its vendor-agnostic approach and open source license. The company is looking to push that advantage
AMD’s CES show kicked off the conference this morning, and it’s easy to see why it wanted to be in the lead. The company’s keynote was bursting with news and new product announcements. We’re going to focus on the Ryzen side of things in this post, but stay tuned for coverage of the company’s new Radeon announcements, too.
Lightweight gaming notebooks don’t have to be slow: something that has been proven out time and time again by products like Razer’s Blade series and ASUS’s ROG Zephyrus G14. Because of that, more and more gaming notebooks are thinner and lighter than their predecessors. Performance doesn’t necessarily scale linearly with power consumption,
AMD revealed its 6nm Ryzen 6000 “Rembrandt” mobile processors at CES 2022. They’ll come with the Zen 3+ and RDNA 2 architectures fabbed on the 6nm process.