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00:00:00 – 00:12:57
AMD has launched the Ryzen 9000 Series chips with the flagship Ryzen 950X targeting Intel's AR Lake desktop chips. These chips, based on Zen 5 architecture, promise significant gaming and compute performance improvements. AMD is also introducing new motherboards, laptop CPUs, workstation GPUs, and server CPUs. Asus announced two new laptop chips, including the Ryzen 9 HX 370 with Radeon 890M graphics. AMD's latest products showcase technological advancements like the Mi 325 accelerator card with HBM3E memory and Epic server CPUs with up to 192 cores. The company aims for further market dominance with innovative offerings and a commitment to product development until 2027.
00:00:00
In this segment of the video, AMD introduces their new Ryzen 950X as the fastest gaming CPU on the market. The Ryzen 9000 Series chips, including the 950X, 900X, 9700X, and 9600X, are designed to challenge Intel’s AR Lake desktop chips. The 950X is a 16-core, 32-thread chip, while the other chips range from 12 to 6 cores. These chips are based on AMD’s new Zen 5 architecture, with improvements in memory control, design layout, branch prediction, instruction pipelines, cache bandwidth, and AVX 512 throughput.
00:03:00
In this segment of the video, AMD is claiming a significant 16% IPC uplift compared to Zen 4. Gaming performance improvements are highlighted, with League of Legends showing a 21% uplift and Far Cry 6 seeing a 10% boost. There are mentions of increased performance in compute workloads like Blender. The absence of 3D V-Cache CPUs is noted, possibly awaiting Intel’s response. New X870 and X870E motherboards are mentioned to be launching alongside these chips, with minor changes from the previous generation. AMD plans to support the AM5 platform until 2027, allowing for multiple CPU upgrades over the years. The segment also introduces new laptop CPUs, workstation GPUs, Epic server CPUs, and data center GPUs from AMD.
00:06:00
In this segment of the video, Asus announces two new laptop chips: the Ryzen 9 HX 370, a 12-core part with Radeon 890M graphics, and the Ryzen 9 360, a 10-core part with Radeon 880M graphics. Both chips feature a Neural Processing Unit (NPU) with 32 tiles providing 50 TOPS (trillion operations per second), outperforming Intel’s NPU. AMD supports block floating points for more accurate operations, claiming superiority over Intel. AMD also introduces the W 7900 workstation card with AI accelerator cores, 48 GB of GDDR6 ECC V-RAM and 123 TFLOPS of FP16 work, targeted for dual slot use. AMD’s Rockham Tool Suite is updated with over 700,000 models supporting AMD, and Rockham is embraced by software giants like OpenAI, PyTorch, and Jacks.
00:09:00
In this segment of the video, AMD introduces the Mi 325 accelerator card with 288GB of HBM3E memory and 6TB/s memory bandwidth, allowing for loading large models with 1 trillion parameters. They tease their upcoming CDNA architecture for 2025, claimed to be 35 times faster in inference. AMD also reveals new Epic server CPUs code-named Chin with up to 192 cores made of 12 core complexes, expected in the second half of 2024. Compared to Intel’s offerings, AMD’s 128-core Chin chips offer 4x the tokens per second in AI workloads. Lastly, AMD boasts controlling 33% of the data center market share, hinting at further growth with their new products.
00:12:00
In this part of the video, the speaker discusses the absence of AI accelerators in future AMD chips, mentioning upcoming releases and expressing curiosity about their real-world performance. The audience is invited to share their thoughts on AMD’s new offerings, including laptop CPUs, Epic server CPUs, and AI technology. To stay updated on similar content, viewers are encouraged to subscribe and engage in the comments section. Additionally, the speaker promotes tools linked in the video description for channel support and thanks viewers for watching.