It looks like they added remote KVM, that wasn’t available in the previous generation Ryzen PRO, presumably because it needs the integrated GPU. Too bad there aren’t Ryzen PRO 7 APUs with 8C/16T.
Now, with this increased focus on offering best-of-class support for business and corporate, the clocking is ticking for AMD to release a new graphics driver for their Ryzen APUs that is up to date and in parity with the most recent fixes and features in Adrenalin. I cannot wait, either, because the latest news from James Prior at the recent AnandTech AMA tells us it should be here by the end of this month.
"three mobile parts for commercial-grade notebooks, and four desktop parts for commercial-grade laptops."
Notebooks vs Laptops?
I hope what was written is a typo!
If not, are we really using notebook/laptop to mean different things in a way that is supposed to be meaningful to a reader and used consistently across the industry?
I've seen desktop parts used in laptops before, but generally they are not "... for commercial-grade laptops.". I think we have reasonable evidence to support the typo theory. ;-)
When I saw Ryzen Pro, I immediately thought: Cool!! Ryzen 7 with 8C/16T and Vega 11 Graphics.... but, no... Pro just designates selective binning and a higher level of support for the product.
The reviews are showing overheating (no extended turbo) and shorter battery life issues compared to Intel. The only benchmark these are doing well are short benchmarks.
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fazalmajid - Tuesday, May 15, 2018 - link
It looks like they added remote KVM, that wasn’t available in the previous generation Ryzen PRO, presumably because it needs the integrated GPU. Too bad there aren’t Ryzen PRO 7 APUs with 8C/16T.1_rick - Tuesday, May 15, 2018 - link
Sure, but you can see why: the die would have to be made larger to fit that second CCX (and presumably more Infinity Fabric, etc.)duploxxx - Tuesday, May 15, 2018 - link
1 vote for threadripper pro in Workstation business to kick some Xeon W and Core X way to high pricingHifihedgehog - Tuesday, May 15, 2018 - link
Now, with this increased focus on offering best-of-class support for business and corporate, the clocking is ticking for AMD to release a new graphics driver for their Ryzen APUs that is up to date and in parity with the most recent fixes and features in Adrenalin. I cannot wait, either, because the latest news from James Prior at the recent AnandTech AMA tells us it should be here by the end of this month.29a - Tuesday, May 15, 2018 - link
I wonder if these will overclock better since they come from the best wafers. Finish the Ryzen review.OFelix - Tuesday, May 15, 2018 - link
"three mobile parts for commercial-grade notebooks, and four desktop parts for commercial-grade laptops."Notebooks vs Laptops?
I hope what was written is a typo!
If not, are we really using notebook/laptop to mean different things in a way that is supposed to be meaningful to a reader and used consistently across the industry?
I hope not!
BurntMyBacon - Wednesday, May 16, 2018 - link
I've seen desktop parts used in laptops before, but generally they are not "... for commercial-grade laptops.". I think we have reasonable evidence to support the typo theory. ;-)HardwareDufus - Tuesday, May 15, 2018 - link
When I saw Ryzen Pro, I immediately thought:Cool!! Ryzen 7 with 8C/16T and Vega 11 Graphics.... but, no... Pro just designates selective binning and a higher level of support for the product.
odaiwai - Tuesday, May 15, 2018 - link
It's still a 4C/8T chip in the 15W TDP - that's the MacBook Air/Pro Pro 13" form-factor, and they're mostly 2C/2T, or 2C/4T if you're lucky.Mikewind Dale - Tuesday, May 15, 2018 - link
ECC memory?pepoluan - Tuesday, May 15, 2018 - link
ALL Ryzen CPUs support ECC memory, though consumer-oriented SKUs are "not validated" (not tested thoroughly).Trixanity - Wednesday, May 16, 2018 - link
Not exactly accurate. All Ryzen CPUs support ECC (true) but it's motherboard dependent. It's the boards that require validation.sharath.naik - Wednesday, May 16, 2018 - link
The reviews are showing overheating (no extended turbo) and shorter battery life issues compared to Intel. The only benchmark these are doing well are short benchmarks.close - Wednesday, May 16, 2018 - link
Link(s)? I'm curious. Perhaps something that is not obscure and will be disproved shortly.shortok - Saturday, May 19, 2018 - link
>There are three mobile parts for commercial-grade notebooks, and four desktop parts for commercial-grade laptops.wat
jeslyjose - Monday, May 21, 2018 - link
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