AMD has unveiled nine new APUs as a part of its Ryzen 8000 series of laptop chips. They're classified into HS and U categories, each with varying TDP ranges. Laptops powered by the said processors will launch in Q1 2024. https://www.notebookcheck.net/AMD-Ryzen-8000-Hawk-Point-laptop-processors-unveiled-with-marginally-faster-AI-performance.778653.0.html
"Ready for generative AI" couple years after running generative AI locally was a problem. Normal CPUs (wink wink bait for Apple haters) are already running big language models.
Not CPUs alone but SoCs.
Quote from: RobertJasiek on December 06, 2023, 22:09:01Not CPUs alone but SoCs.
No difference in this case, same old CPU+GPU.
'That, plus its confusing names, lends credibility to Intel's recent core truths rant."
Like Intel hs any legs to stand on with the 'Core truths.'
12th Gen = 13th Gen = over half of 14th Gen all on the same process node
6th gen = 7th gen cores = 8th gen cores = 9th gen cores = 10th gen cores all on the same node plus some of the 11th gen (Rocket Lake)
So only 11th Gen was new and on a new node because MTL = RPL other than new node with reduced clock speeds
So only 6th, some of the 11th, 12th and some of 14th were/are 'new'. 4 news in 9 years
No 8030 and 8020 this time? Good, but then why use 4 at all? Because 8050 coming?
Since when 40% uplift in AI performance in "Marginally faster"?
Can anyone name a real acceleration of any of their current tasks using these blocks in the SoC?