Monday, September 3rd 2012
AMD "Trinity" A-Series APUs Competitive with Desktop Core i3 "Ivy Bridge"
If the prices trickling in from leading distributors such as BLT are anything to go by, AMD's next-generation A-Series "Trinity" APUs will occupy price-points competitive with Intel's Core i3 and Pentium chips based on the "Ivy Bridge" silicon. AMD thinks its quad-core (two module) Piledriver architecture cores, coupled with VLIW4-based graphics cores have a fair shot against dual-core Ivy Bridge Core i3 chips, with triple- and dual-core A-series "Trinity" chips going up against Pentium "Ivy Bridge." Two of the chips leading AMD's lot will be the A10-5700 (quad-core, 3.40 GHz, 384 SP), and A10-5800K (unlocked multiplier, quad-core, 3.80 GHz, 384 SP).
Source:
Engadget
26 Comments on AMD "Trinity" A-Series APUs Competitive with Desktop Core i3 "Ivy Bridge"
Same price for A8-5500 and 5600K?
Same price for A10-5700 and 5800K?
Atleast not until Steam Roller.
Come on AMD start releasing them!
To damn bad AMD is taking forever releasing these chips to retail:rolleyes:
In total, Intel has had a worse track record for behind uncompetitive.
As much as I've been waiting for Piledriver. Now it's almost here I'm having second thoughts. My Athlon II x4 is still doing the job. Think I've grown out of the constantly spending money on component stage.
Most of us that'll purchase a unlocked intel won't be using on the IGPU anyways.
AMD was cheaper, and sometimes managed to be faster by tweaking the design between Intel's new processes and designs, and or by exceeding the power and thermal design. But that is where the speed wars came from, and why AMD had to start naming processors by their frequency equal instead of actual speed.
It was only when C2D went through lots of stepping and revision, predominately the last Wolfdale and Yorkfield iteration was significantly better in raw performance and overclocking. It was only at this point the Athlon X2 and Phenom I became uncompetitive and couldn't compete.
Phenom II however was able to compete with C2D Wolfdale and Yorkfield just fine though and could overclock just as well. Who cares how AMD did it. All I know is my Duron was spanking the P4 back in the day and my Sempron raped the Pentium 4 and the Intel Celerons were only good as coasters lol
From 1999 to about 2006 AMD had a lot of success in performance and price. Intel had nothing to offer until the late core family - present.
www.legitreviews.com/article/682/12/ And this was a late B3 stepping.
And once you started overclocking the Intel's they really raped the Phenom.
You are talking about a window for AMD of about 6 years where they had a superior product, and partially due to Intel and their size, and poor marketing they failed to capitalize. Sucked for them that few of the majority knew what was going on, but those who did used them. I started with some Athlon socket A boards and tweaked and played with pencils too. I also owned a prescott, and Athlon X64, and X64 DC, and many others.
I was there, did it and still do. Since the launch of C2D AMD has been back in second place, and unfortunately they have had a mediocre showing of late chips with issues.
Pinto VS Evo.