AMD’s Raven Ridge Ryzen 5 2500U has appeared on the Geekbench database
Â
AMD’s Ryzen architecture will soon be releasing in APU form, first on mobile and then desktop platforms offering the combination of Ryzen CPU cores and a Vega GPU component.Â
Â
Ryzen mobile is set to release before the end of this year, starting on consumer mobile products, with a planned release in Q1 2018 for consumer desktops. These Ryzen-based APUs will be a key part of AMD’s mobile strategy, offering both strong CPU and GPU components at low TDPs.Â
Â
An APU called the Ryzen 5 2500U has appeared on the
Geekbench 4 database, a CPU that offers 4 CPU cores and 8 threads with a base clock of 2GHz an unknown boost clock. This APU is thought to be a mobile model, given the low base clock speed and the U suffix on the product name. In Intel’s terminology, U typically means Ultra-Low-Power, a name that is typically reserved for mobile products. AMD has borrowed Intel’s naming scheme before, so AMD’s use of the U suffix is not unusual. Â Â
Â
When compared to
AMD’s Bristol Ridge A12 9800, the Ryzen 5 2500U dominates, offering over 900 more points in single-threaded CPU performance and over 50% more multi-threaded CPU performance. Note that the A12 9800 is a desktop APU with a TDP of 65W and a maximum CPU clock speed of 4.2GHz.
Â
 Â
Â
AMD has promised huge performance boosts for their upcoming Ryzen Mobile APUs, finally placing AMD into a competitive position in the mobile market.
What will differentiate AMD’s Ryzen mobile APUs from Intel’s mobile processors is their inclusion of Vega graphics, which should give them a distinct advantage in gaming applications. This APU isn’t going to be on par with dedicated gaming GPUs, though it will almost certainly deliver mobile users more GPU performance than other CPU integrated graphics solutions.
 Â
Â
You can join the discussion on AMD’s Raven Ridge Ryzen 5 2500U CPU performance leaks on the OC3D Forums.
 Â
AMD’s Raven Ridge Ryzen 5 2500U has appeared on the Geekbench database
Â
AMD’s Ryzen architecture will soon be releasing in APU form, first on mobile and then desktop platforms offering the combination of Ryzen CPU cores and a Vega GPU component.Â
Â
Ryzen mobile is set to release before the end of this year, starting on consumer mobile products, with a planned release in Q1 2018 for consumer desktops. These Ryzen-based APUs will be a key part of AMD’s mobile strategy, offering both strong CPU and GPU components at low TDPs.Â
Â
An APU called the Ryzen 5 2500U has appeared on the
Geekbench 4 database, a CPU that offers 4 CPU cores and 8 threads with a base clock of 2GHz an unknown boost clock. This APU is thought to be a mobile model, given the low base clock speed and the U suffix on the product name. In Intel’s terminology, U typically means Ultra-Low-Power, a name that is typically reserved for mobile products. AMD has borrowed Intel’s naming scheme before, so AMD’s use of the U suffix is not unusual. Â Â
Â
When compared to
AMD’s Bristol Ridge A12 9800, the Ryzen 5 2500U dominates, offering over 900 more points in single-threaded CPU performance and over 50% more multi-threaded CPU performance. Note that the A12 9800 is a desktop APU with a TDP of 65W and a maximum CPU clock speed of 4.2GHz.
Â
 Â
Â
AMD has promised huge performance boosts for their upcoming Ryzen Mobile APUs, finally placing AMD into a competitive position in the mobile market.
What will differentiate AMD’s Ryzen mobile APUs from Intel’s mobile processors is their inclusion of Vega graphics, which should give them a distinct advantage in gaming applications. This APU isn’t going to be on par with dedicated gaming GPUs, though it will almost certainly deliver mobile users more GPU performance than other CPU integrated graphics solutions.
 Â
Â
You can join the discussion on AMD’s Raven Ridge Ryzen 5 2500U CPU performance leaks on the OC3D Forums.
 Â