Numbers will accommodate a range of new CPUs that sometimes use older Zen cores.
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So which digit will roll over into hexadecimal first?
If we're being perfectly realistic, as long as you're not buying some Imtel Inside (R) bargain basement Walmart trash, regular users haven't needed to know the nitty gritty about their CPU in at least a decade, maybe two.How are they expecting this will work? The only people who are going to remember this are giant nerds who would have just looked it up anyway!
P.S. Yes I know WE'RE all giant nerds here, but what about other people?
Our branding is easy to understand, just watch this 20-minute presentation.
How are they expecting this will work? The only people who are going to remember this are giant nerds who would have just looked it up anyway!
P.S. Yes I know WE'RE all giant nerds here, but what about other people?
So which digit will roll over into hexadecimal first?
There's no sense in waiting, we want the AAAAHX chip now!
So which digit will roll over into hexadecimal first?
There's no sense in waiting, we want the AAAAHX chip now!
AMD Ryzen 3 4100 and Ryzen 5 4500 Review: The Budget CPU BeatdownSo which digit will roll over into hexadecimal first?
There's no sense in waiting, we want the AAAAHX chip now!
Not a Ryzen 9 LEET-HX?
In reality the new naming scheme is a mess. I'm also a little shocked that this seemingly confirms that AMD will continue to sell 'new' Zen/Zen+ chips.
Does this mean that a 8640u released in 2023 and 9640u released in 2024 are the same chip? Higher number so should mean better right? Nope, thanks amd.
Other people don't care anyway. This is all information for us nerds. A normal person is just going to buy whatever's on sale, or they're going to get what their employer gives them.Our branding is easy to understand, just watch this 20-minute presentation.
How are they expecting this will work? The only people who are going to remember this are giant nerds who would have just looked it up anyway!
P.S. Yes I know WE'RE all giant nerds here, but what about other people?
Does this mean that a 8640u released in 2023 and 9640u released in 2024 are the same chip? Higher number so should mean better right? Nope, thanks amd.
I approve of the "AF" suffix. They need to produce more chips deserving of that.Does this mean that a 8640u released in 2023 and 9640u released in 2024 are the same chip? Higher number so should mean better right? Nope, thanks amd.
It'd indicate minor architectural changes with a new revision probably. They could stick the revision in the name too, I'd be fine with that, but that'd also make the names much longer and more confusing.
They kind of did that with the 1600AF in the past when they moved to the AF revision (Intel calls this stepping) and switched nodes. YD1600BBAEBOX was 14nm while the YD1600BBAFBOX was 12nm.
In the new naming scheme we would have had the 1600 revisions up to ae named 1610, while the revisions af and after would have been 2610. Then there would have also been a 2620, which would have been the Zen 2 2600 since both the 12nm 2600 and 12nm 1600AF came out in the same year.
Personally I find the new scheme way more informative, but it'll take a bit of getting used to probably. I do like being able to know the architecture and rough revision number from the name alone. Seems way more transparent.
Even as an enthusiast...I'm still going to need a cheat sheet/reference table to remember what each number means. Which isn't really superior.
And pretty annoyed that they are even planning on still producing old architectures. Effectively the first number is meaningless and only there to keep increasing year over year. I'd argue Architecture should be first, followed by segment. If they wanted to be accurate, rather than tricking people into thinking they got more than they did.
"Why is my computer so slow? It's a higher number than my last one."
I approve of the "AF" suffix. They need to produce more chips deserving of that.Does this mean that a 8640u released in 2023 and 9640u released in 2024 are the same chip? Higher number so should mean better right? Nope, thanks amd.
It'd indicate minor architectural changes with a new revision probably. They could stick the revision in the name too, I'd be fine with that, but that'd also make the names much longer and more confusing.
They kind of did that with the 1600AF in the past when they moved to the AF revision (Intel calls this stepping) and switched nodes. YD1600BBAEBOX was 14nm while the YD1600BBAFBOX was 12nm.
In the new naming scheme we would have had the 1600 revisions up to ae named 1610, while the revisions af and after would have been 2610. Then there would have also been a 2620, which would have been the Zen 2 2600 since both the 12nm 2600 and 12nm 1600AF came out in the same year.
Personally I find the new scheme way more informative, but it'll take a bit of getting used to probably. I do like being able to know the architecture and rough revision number from the name alone. Seems way more transparent.
You are either have to be a huge nerd/gamer to decipher the meaning of our processors, then you will be worthy to buy.Laptop/ average Joe PC buyers browsing the market-
Intel: If you are part of the average 90% of the buyers, you'll only need to make decision about i3, 5 and 7. And I bet you already know about our generation numbering, we are doing the same thing for 20 years to make life easy for you.
AMYou are either have to be a huge nerd/gamer to decipher our processors.
Even as an enthusiast...I'm still going to need a cheat sheet/reference table to remember what each number means. Which isn't really superior.
And pretty annoyed that they are even planning on still producing old architectures. Effectively the first number is meaningless and only there to keep increasing year over year. I'd argue Architecture should be first, followed by segment. If they wanted to be accurate, rather than tricking people into thinking they got more than they did.
"Why is my computer so slow? It's a higher number than my last one."
I have to wonder if this new naming scheme is caused by the semiconductor/supply issues from COVID? It stands to reason having the "older" architecture continue to be used would, theoretically, help alleviate some of the price pain for getting an even marginal upgrade.
Or they could just be following Intel's playbook. Which is not a good thing.
AMD copied this 3/5/7 system from Intel which was a good step. But their no. of similar products and number based processor marketing (intel usually only advertise power and the name. ex.- core i3. Users don't even have to see the number like 7120G etc) confuses average buyers. This is one of the reasons Laptop OEMs still generally avoids AMD for general models and Laptops with AMD are hard to find in developing markets. I'm sure most Ars readers have no problem with such thing as most are long-time so called nerds. But 90% of the buyers are like their 60 year old dads. And they don't trust store salesmen and still like to make their own informed decisions.Laptop/ average Joe PC buyers browsing the market-
Intel: If you are part of the average 90% of the buyers, you'll only need to make decision about i3, 5 and 7. And I bet you already know about our generation numbering, we are doing the same thing for 20 years to make life easy for you.
AMYou are either have to be a huge nerd/gamer to decipher our processors.
Intel's numbers are even more arbitrary than this. AMD also has marketing names e.g. Ryzen 3/5/7/9 which are probably all the average user needs to know.
AMD just copied this 3/5/7 system from Intel which was a good step. But their no. of similar products and number based processor marketing (intel usually only advertise power and the name. ex.- core i3. Users don't even have to see the number like 7120G etc) confuses average buyers.Laptop/ average Joe PC buyers browsing the market-
Intel: If you are part of the average 90% of the buyers, you'll only need to make decision about i3, 5 and 7. And I bet you already know about our generation numbering, we are doing the same thing for 20 years to make life easy for you.
AMYou are either have to be a huge nerd/gamer to decipher our processors.
Intel's numbers are even more arbitrary than this. AMD also has marketing names e.g. Ryzen 3/5/7/9 which are probably all the average user needs to know.
So really the important number is the gen (second to last), segment (should indicate core count and whatnot) then features (last), then the power use letter.
The rest is going to be :shrug:
The bigger question to me than the model numbering is why they are using anything other than their latest architecture in newly released chips.
Does this mean that a 8640u released in 2023 and 9640u released in 2024 are the same chip? Higher number so should mean better right? Nope, thanks amd.
That's a good point. It's up to AMD to at least make sure there's some sort of clock bump or process node advantage to make something newer (or higher numbered) perform better, and I'm not confident that will be the case.
I will caveat though that at least we can see what Zen version is in use, whereas the existing scheme doesn't do that for use and you just need to Google everything to see what the core architecture actually is.