Quote from: Bogdan Solca on September 08, 2020, 13:12:29...because ASrock's failure to update their spec pages in no way negates the fact that this has been well established on forums outside of ChipHell for well over a month? I'm not saying this isn't worth reporting on, I'm saying the reporting is a bit late and poorly/strangely sourced.Quote from: Valantar on September 08, 2020, 10:47:51How is this a moot point when the official specs only mention Picasso as the best option for the A300?Quote from: Bogdan Solca on September 08, 2020, 09:48:20Not specifically the 4750G (though I believe there have been benchmarks and pictures of that config shared there), but several 4650Gs at the very least. Which, given that CPU support is determined by series/family and not on a per-model basis, makes this a moot point. 4650G and 4750G are the same TDP, same series and same socket, so any motherboard that accepts one accepts the other unless there is something very weird going on.
@Valantar: This only came to my attention a few days ago, plus it looks like no one in the thread you linked reported on the A300 running a Ryzen 7 Pro 4750G. Also, my article is mostly focusing on X300 that was announced recently. I updated the non-overclockable RAM part, thanks for that.
Quote from: Valantar on September 08, 2020, 10:47:51How is this a moot point when the official specs only mention Picasso as the best option for the A300?Quote from: Bogdan Solca on September 08, 2020, 09:48:20Not specifically the 4750G (though I believe there have been benchmarks and pictures of that config shared there), but several 4650Gs at the very least. Which, given that CPU support is determined by series/family and not on a per-model basis, makes this a moot point. 4650G and 4750G are the same TDP, same series and same socket, so any motherboard that accepts one accepts the other unless there is something very weird going on.
@Valantar: This only came to my attention a few days ago, plus it looks like no one in the thread you linked reported on the A300 running a Ryzen 7 Pro 4750G. Also, my article is mostly focusing on X300 that was announced recently. I updated the non-overclockable RAM part, thanks for that.
Quote from: Bogdan Solca on September 08, 2020, 09:48:20Not specifically the 4750G (though I believe there have been benchmarks and pictures of that config shared there), but several 4650Gs at the very least. Which, given that CPU support is determined by series/family and not on a per-model basis, makes this a moot point. 4650G and 4750G are the same TDP, same series and same socket, so any motherboard that accepts one accepts the other unless there is something very weird going on.
@Valantar: This only came to my attention a few days ago, plus it looks like no one in the thread you linked reported on the A300 running a Ryzen 7 Pro 4750G. Also, my article is mostly focusing on X300 that was announced recently. I updated the non-overclockable RAM part, thanks for that.