Thursday, October 27th 2016

AMD Announces the Radeon Pro 400 Graphics

AMD today unveiled a new family of power-efficient graphics processors, Radeon Pro 400 Series Graphics. Available first in the all-new 15-inch MacBook Pro, select Radeon Pro 400 Series graphics deliver extraordinary performance and efficiency gains over the prior generation to fuel modern creative efforts from anywhere inspiration strikes.

Radeon Pro 400 Series Graphics are designed specifically for today's makers -- the artists, designers, photographers, filmmakers, visualizers and engineers that shape the modern content creation era. Harnessing AMD's acclaimed Polaris architecture, Radeon Pro 400 Series Graphics are built on the industry's most advanced process technology for graphics processors in production today, 14 nm FinFET, resulting in incredibly small transistors.

To enable the thinnest graphics processor possible, AMD also employs a complex process known as 'die thinning' to reduce the thickness of each wafer of silicon used in the processor from 780 microns to just 380 microns, or slightly less than the thickness of four pieces of paper. Operating in a power envelope under 35W, the Radeon Pro 450, 455, and 460 Series graphics processors deliver spectacular energy efficiency and cool, quiet operation to speed through the most demanding tasks in popular creative applications.

"We couldn't be more proud to have Radeon Pro 400 Series Graphics launching in the new 15-inch MacBook Pro, a notebook designed for performance and creativity," said Raja Koduri, senior vice president and chief architect, Radeon Technologies Group, AMD. "Today there are millions of professional creators and designers, and a billion more who aspire to reach the next level. Radeon Pro 400 Series Graphics are a powerful and versatile creative technology that gives makers entirely new ways to create the art of the impossible no matter where they are."

To celebrate the people behind the products, and the passion shared by makers of all sorts, AMD is launching a new program called "Meet the Creators," bringing creators together and inviting them to share their work. Creators will have the opportunity to collaborate across a variety of fields, learn about new tools and techniques for their respective crafts, and have a chance to be featured in Radeon Pro promotional campaigns.

The "Meet the Creators" program will also explore how Radeon Pro graphics play a role in the creative process, from harnessing extraordinary graphics performance in today's popular 2D and 3D creative applications, to using modern low-overhead graphics and compute APIs to accelerate rendering in today's workflows. A part of that workflow is Radeon ProRender, AMD's physically-based rendering engine planned for open source later this year, and supported via plugins across many popular 3D content creation applications including Autodesk Maya, and a beta plugin for Rhino. Bolstering the list of supported applications, AMD and Maxon announced today that Radeon ProRender software will be available in a future release of Maxon's powerful and intuitive Cinema 4D application for 3D modeling, animation and rendering, providing GPU-accelerated performance on Mac by leveraging Radeon Pro graphics and Apple's Metal API.
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5 Comments on AMD Announces the Radeon Pro 400 Graphics

#1
mcraygsx
I think AMD is on a right track for a solid recovery this fall and hopefully 2017.
Posted on Reply
#2
ratirt
Well that's something I didn't expect. I been thinking about that AMD release something like 400 series PRO that would give more performance thanks to die upgrades etc. Well I guess they are still thinking about efficiency and low power.
Either way it's nice that the company spreads around all markets not just most common discreet video cards.
Posted on Reply
#3
Jism
ratirtWell that's something I didn't expect. I been thinking about that AMD release something like 400 series PRO that would give more performance thanks to die upgrades etc. Well I guess they are still thinking about efficiency and low power.
Either way it's nice that the company spreads around all markets not just most common discreet video cards.
It's just a contract between Apple and AMD to deliver GPU's from this point.
Posted on Reply
#4
Ungari
I wonder if these are the binned Polaris uber chips used in E9260 and E9950 with the 50% improved Performance Per Watt?
Posted on Reply
#5
Assimilator
UngariI wonder if these are the binned Polaris uber chips used in E9260 and E9950 with the 50% improved Performance Per Watt?
Considering E9260 TDP is 50W and E9950 is 95W, I'm guessing no - unless they're using even more aggressively binned chips at even lower clocks.

More likely is that AMD is harvesting defective Polaris dies that aren't even good enough for RX 460 in order to make these. Which means performance will be abysmal.
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