Wednesday, September 16th 2009

AMD Introduces Industry's First Sub-$100 Quad-Core Processor

As part of the new desktop platform designed for mainstream consumers, AMD today announced the first ever quad-core processor for less than $100 Suggested System Builder Price (SSBP). By balancing the power of new AMD Athlon II X4 quad-core processors and the AMD 785G chipset featuring ATI Radeon HD 4200 graphics, AMD delivers smooth HD visuals and the foundation for a great Windows 7 experience.

When matched against similarly priced competitive processors, the AMD Athlon II X4 620 processor delivers superior multitasking performance allowing mainstream users to do more in less time, for less money. The AMD Mainstream Desktop Platform leverages AMD software to help enhance the overall experience. ATI Stream technology, for example, enables hardware acceleration that can speed HD video conversion-time so content can be ready faster for use on-the-go.
Combining the efficiency of 45nm processors and this platform's built-in power management technologies for a cool and quiet PC, an AMD Athlon II processor-based platform can serve-up an amazing Blu-ray movie experience using less energy than a standard 75 watt light bulb. This platform also can improve business users' experience as part of AMD Business Class technology. With this second generation commercial platform, AMD industry partners can offer a variety of form factors with superior value, exceptional energy efficiency, advanced visual productivity. This platform also has support for essential manageability, security and virtualization features that today's businesses demand.

"Our goal is to deliver a great computing experience and maximize value for our customers," said John Cook, vice president of marketing, global PC business, HP. "The new AMD quad-core processors offer the right balance between excellent performance and price, and allow HP to continue to be a best-in-class provider of consumer technology."

"Designed with customer needs in mind, Windows 7 simplifies and improves the computing experience," said Mike Ybarra, general manager of Windows Product Management at Microsoft Corp. "The introduction of the new AMD Mainstream Desktop Platform coupled with Windows 7, allows end users to enjoy their digital entertainment with a faster, higher performing experience at an attractive price point."
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59 Comments on AMD Introduces Industry's First Sub-$100 Quad-Core Processor

#51
SonDa5
Hopefully this will lower the price of the Intel i5.
Posted on Reply
#52
aj28
NewEgg is pegging this as a Propus core chip, which I doubt they'd do if they were shipping some of them with Denebs. I would think they'd dump 'em on OEMs, not end-users who know better.
Posted on Reply
#53
Wile E
Power User
aj28NewEgg is pegging this as a Propus core chip, which I doubt they'd do if they were shipping some of them with Denebs. I would think they'd dump 'em on OEMs, not end-users who know better.
Newegg only goes by what AMD tells them. So if AMD is releasing some of these as Deneb, it's silent, and Newegg wouldn't know the difference anyway.
Posted on Reply
#54
devguy
aj28NewEgg is pegging this as a Propus core chip, which I doubt they'd do if they were shipping some of them with Denebs. I would think they'd dump 'em on OEMs, not end-users who know better.
Well I'll find out soon enough! :) Gonna be doing some comparisons between my Phenom 720/965 and this Athlon 620. This chip might be a little tricky to get up there, but I always feel like a real man overclocking a multiplier-locked processor rather than a two-bit stooge with an African-American Edition AMD or an Intel Extreme [ly lame and overpriced] processor.
Posted on Reply
#55
aj28
Wile ENewegg only goes by what AMD tells them. So if AMD is releasing some of these as Deneb, it's silent, and Newegg wouldn't know the difference anyway.
NewEgg will ship more of these than any other retailer in the US, online or otherwise. I have no doubt that their buyers would specify that only Propus-based cores be shipped. Don't think AMD doesn't know which are which. The cheapest of everything always end up in OEM machines, meaning this will soon be AMD's flagship quad-core in your neighbor's HP. As with old Agena cores plagued with the TLB bug, which continued selling in OEM machines long after they were phased out of retail distribution, I think we will see the same thing here.

That or it's all just imagined. I mean, AMD changed SKUs after they advanced steppings and eradicated the TLB bug, so I highly doubt they'd ship two completely different processing cores under the same one.
Posted on Reply
#56
Zubasa
devguyWell I'll find out soon enough! :) Gonna be doing some comparisons between my Phenom 720/965 and this Athlon 620. This chip might be a little tricky to get up there, but I always feel like a real man overclocking a multiplier-locked processor rather than a two-bit stooge with an African-American Edition AMD or an Intel Extreme [ly lame and overpriced] processor.
You be suprised how easy it is to OC these chips, the high multi makes it a piece of cake for 3.2Ghz+
Just set the base clock to 250 and bam you get a 3+ Ghz quad.
Posted on Reply
#57
Melvis
newtekie1The Phenom 9600 has been selling for under $100 for some time now, I've seen it on newegg as low as $85. Though it has been sold out a lot recently, probably because they were clearing stock for this.
O ok i didnt realize that, as i havent looked at the older phenoms for awhile now, thanks for the update. Id still have to check if its under $100 here in AUS tho, id say not, even with this new Quad been priced at $100 US.
Posted on Reply
#58
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
ZubasaYou be suprised how easy it is to OC these chips, the high multi makes it a piece of cake for 3.2Ghz+
Just set the base clock to 250 and bam you get a 3+ Ghz quad.
MelvisO ok i didnt realize that, as i havent looked at the older phenoms for awhile now, thanks for the update. Id still have to check if its under $100 here in AUS tho, id say not, even with this new Quad been priced at $100 US.
staticice.com.au/cgi-bin/search.cgi?q=phenom+9600&spos=3


we are out of sync with price drops, so it may drop $50 in the coming weeks - but for now, we're $200 for the 9600
Posted on Reply
#59
newtekie1
Semi-Retired Folder
How long before we see that Q7500 from Intel to counter? I'd love to see a nice little budget quad-core ware going on.
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