The Asian Age

Ryzen gets a performanc­e boost

AMD promises higher efficiency at a relatively cheaper price

- ARCHISHMAN PRADHAN

The new AMD CPUs will still be running the AM4 socket. So you don’t need to change your motherboar­ds, just a BIOS update will suffice

The first generation of Ryzen processors hit the shelves last February and took the market by storm. AMD had given us, the PC users the option to seek high end computatio­n gains at the fraction of the cost that the Intel counterpar­ts were offering.

And now the second generation of Ryzen CPUs are also available. With the launch of the next generation, AMD is promising higher performanc­e per core, and more efficiency thanks to the 12nm fabricatio­n process that the new generation are adopting.

AMD is promising a 10 per cent performanc­e boost. Owing to the adoption of the 12nm fabricatio­n process itself throw in the fact that the new Ryzen CPUs also boast much higher stock core and boost clock speeds, and we may be looking at significan­t performanc­e gains from the previous generation of processors.

The highlight of the Ryzen lineup, as mentioned was price to performanc­e and AMD is not deviating from that philosophy. The new flagship CPU, the Ryzen 7 2700X, featuring a stock core clock of 3.9 GHz with a boost clock of 4.3 GHz, 8 physical cores with 16 virtual cores will retail in India for ` 24,500 + GST. That still comes out cheaper than Intel’s 8700K which is a 6 core/ 12 thread processor albeit with higher price.

Another thing for which AMD ought to be applauded is that the new CPUs will still be running the AM4 socket. So you don’t need to change your motherboar­ds in case you are using the old Ryzen CPUs, just a BIOS update will suffice.

While AMD has been consistent­ly dropping the ball in the GPU front, they seem to be doing quite well on the CPU front thanks to Ryzen and the trend looks set to continue.

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