PC World - USA (2019-07)

(Antfer) #1
16 PCWorld JULY 2019

NEWS AMD RYZEN 3000 APU


should come in handy if you plan on
overclocking the chip.

NEW NAME, OLDER CORE
DESIGN
One thing to keep in mind as you review that
menu of AMD CPUs above: Even though the
Ryzen 3 3200G and Ryzen 5 3400G carry
“3000-series” model names, they’re not actually
AMD’s new leading edge 7nm Zen 2 cores.
That cutting-edge technology is reserved for the
new Ryzen 3000-series CPUs alone.
Instead, both Ryzen 3000 APUs are actually
based on AMD’s prior-gen 12nm cores, aka
Zen+, despite their model numbers.
Before you mount your outrage horse, this
isn’t actually new for AMD. AMD’s previous
Ryzen 2000 APUs were also introduced with
AMD’s original 14nm Zen cores just before
the company’s newer 12nm-based Zen+
cores were introduced, so it’s not a new
naming convention. The core technology in
AMD’s Ryzen APUs always lag a generation
behind the much pricier Ryzen CPUs.
And yes, please do pound your fist on the
table and demand an expensive new 7nm
process in a $99 chip, and then realize you
actually said it out loud.

INTEL STEPS UP THE
COMPETITION
What might be more of a problem for AMD is
how well the Ryzen 3000 APUs handle their
Intel equivalents. The original Ryzen APUs went

against far weaker 7th-gen Intel CPUs because
Intel’s newer 8th-gen chips would only work
on motherboards costing $120 or more.
With this launch, Intel’s 9th-gen chips can
slot into motherboards at a more reasonable
$55. So now, AMD’s quad-core APUs will
battle far more potent chips instead of
ho-hum dual-core CPUs.
While a Ryzen 3 3200G is probably going
to face a back and forth battle with a Core
i3-9100 in computing tasks, the quad-core
(with SMT) Ryzen 5 3400G will have to duke it
out against a six-core Core i5-9400.

WE SEE WHAT YOU DID
THERE, AMD...
We suspect that’s why AMD didn’t show off
benchmark charts in tasks that would load up
the CPU cores. Instead, we saw benchmarks
using PCMark 10 Extended, Adobe Premiere
GPU Accelerated, and SPECviewperf.
SPECviewperf is a graphics-intensive
professional benchmark. And, well, the name
“Adobe Premiere GPU Accelerated” pretty
much tells you what that test means too.
PCMark 10 Extended can lean either way but
with AMD failing to show Cinebench,
Blender, or other multi-core rendering tests
we can surmise it probably means the new
APUs are neck-and-neck with Intel’s chips
there—or possibly slower.
But it seems like the true strength of
AMD’s Ryzen APUs—their integrated Radeon
Vega graphics—remains a win. AMD released
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