AMD updates its notebook A-Series Accelerated Processing Units

AMD updated its notebook A-Series family of APUs.

 

Yesterday, AMD updated its A-Series notebook Accelerated Processing Units (APUs), combining up to four x86 CPU cores with up to 400 Radeon cores and delivering powerful DirectX11-capable, discrete graphics and dedicated HD video processing on a single chip.

The AMD A-Series family of APUs also features AMD Steady Video, designed to stabilize videos playback, eliminating shakes and jitters. On select systems with AMD A-Series APUs, Internet Explorer 9 will include an AMD Steady Video plugin, unlocking one-click control for video stabilization.

 

AMD A-Series Notebook APUs

  • A8-3550MX – Four CPU cores, 2.0 GHz CPU base (2.7 GHz Turbo Core), 45W TDP, 400 Radeon Cores, 4 MB L2 cache
  • A8-3520M – Four CPU cores, 1.6 GHz CPU base (2.5 GHz Turbo Core), 35W TDP, 400 Radeon Cores, 4 MB L2 cache
  • A6-3430MX – Four CPU cores, 1.7 GHz CPU base (2.4 GHz Turbo Core), 45W TDP, 320 Radeon Cores, 4 MB L2 cache
  • A6-3420M – Four CPU cores, 1.5 GHz CPU base (2.4 GHz Turbo Core), 35W TDP, 320 Radeon Cores, 4 MB L2 cache
  • A4-3330MX – Two CPU cores, 2.2 GHz CPU base (2.6 GHz Turbo Core), 45W TDP, 240 Radeon Cores, 2 MB L2 cache
  • A4-3320M – Two CPU cores, 2.0 GHz CPU base (2.6 GHz Turbo Core), 35W TDP, 240 Radeon Cores, 2 MB L2 cache
  • A4-3305M – Two CPU cores, 1.9 GHz CPU base (2.5 GHz Turbo Core), 35W TDP, 160 Radeon Cores, 1 MB L2 cache
  • E2-3000M – Two CPU cores, 1.8 GHz CPU base (2.4 GHz Turbo Core), 35W TDP, 160 Radeon Cores, 1 MB L2 Cache

 

The new AMD A-Series APUs improve the first generation notebook processors, providing more responsive multitasking, long battery-life, vivid graphics, lifelike games, lag-free videos and ultimate multimedia performance.

 

Source AMD

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