During the last “Meet The Expert Webcast”, AMD published an updated AMD AM5 desktop socket roadmap. This interesting news was discovered by renowned hardware leak detective @harukaz5719 and already caused quite a stir in the technology community. The company officially confirmed its long-term 4-year plan to keep the AM5 socket until at least 2026. The AMD AM5 desktop socket is what allows the processor to be connected to the motherboard, making it critical to a system’s performance and expansion capabilities. The release of an updated roadmap is a clear sign that AMD remains committed to the AM5 socket and has long-term plans for its development and support.
The new roadmap reveals interesting information about future products from AMD. Most notable is the mention of the Ryzen 8000 series with Zen5 and Navi 3.5 architectures. So far, AMD has not officially confirmed these architectures for a specific product line, which indicates that they are in development. Zen5 is expected to be a further development of the successful Zen architecture, which is already used in the current Ryzen processors. Navi 3.5, on the other hand, refers to the next generation of AMD’s graphics architecture, which is expected to offer improved performance and efficiency. According to rumors, AMD’s next-generation APU, known as “Strix Point,” will include either 16 or 40 CUs (compute units). These CUs are expected to be based on the RDNA3.5 architecture. An APU combines a CPU and an integrated GPU on one chip and is often used in laptops and low-end desktops. However, the mention of “Strix Point” with the RDNA3.5 architecture in the roadmap suggests that such products could also be developed for desktop systems. This would be an exciting development, as desktop users could benefit from the next-generation improvements in graphics performance and power efficiency.
In addition, the roadmap also mentions the use of Zen4 and Navi 3.0 for the Ryzen 7000 desktop. Currently, the Ryzen 7000 series uses the RDNA2 architecture for integrated graphics. The mention of Navi 3.0, also known as RDNA3, suggests that this architecture will be available for the AM5 socket later this year. The AM5 socket is the successor to the current AM4 socket and is expected to be compatible with future Ryzen processors. To enable Navi 3.0 on the AM5 socket, only one product could be considered, namely the Phoenix APU. This APU is currently used in high-end notebooks and would bring powerful integrated graphics to desktop platforms. The roadmap thus provides exciting insights into the future development of AMD’s processors and GPUs. If the information proves true, we can look forward to powerful Zen5 processors, improved graphics architectures like Navi 3.5 and Navi 3.0, and the possibility of APUs with impressive graphics capabilities for desktop systems. It remains to be seen how AMD will use these technologies in the future and what benefits they will bring to users.
Although AMD has yet to officially confirm its plans for Ryzen 8000, the company has hinted that it intends to introduce the next-generation CPU core architecture in three different variants: Zen5, Zen5c and Zen5 with 3D V-Cache. According to AMD, these products will be based on both 4nm and 3nm manufacturing processes.
Source: harukaze5719
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