Monday, January 15th 2024
AMD Zen 5 "Granite Ridge" CPUs Reportedly in Mass Production
AMD concentrated on the promotion of new Zen 4-based APU products at last week's CES trade show, and they even lobbed in a couple of new Zen 3 offerings for PC enthusiasts who are more than happy to stick with Team Red's last generation AM4 socket. Future-focused folks were a little bit disappointed with Team Red keeping quiet about their next-generation "Zen 5" CPUs at CES 2024—one seeker of information, Peter Weltzmaier, turned to a notorious source of hardware leaks on X. Kepler has a decent track record of providing accurate inside tracks—and they more than happy to address Weltzmaier's query regarding the status of AMD's upcoming "Granite Ridge" desktop CPU series.
Kepler believes that Granite Ridge has reached the mass production phase, but did not provide any further elaboration beyond a brief reply on social media—this information should be taken with a grain of salt. We have not heard a lot about Granite Ridge processors since last November, with AMD choosing to not preview next-gen desktop processors at a December "Advancing AI" event. The rumor mill proposed that XDNA-based Ryzen AI acceleration will not be a key feature present on Granite Ridge and a mobile-oriented derivative called "Fire Ridge."
Sources:
TechRadar News, Kepler L2 Tweet, Wccftech
Kepler believes that Granite Ridge has reached the mass production phase, but did not provide any further elaboration beyond a brief reply on social media—this information should be taken with a grain of salt. We have not heard a lot about Granite Ridge processors since last November, with AMD choosing to not preview next-gen desktop processors at a December "Advancing AI" event. The rumor mill proposed that XDNA-based Ryzen AI acceleration will not be a key feature present on Granite Ridge and a mobile-oriented derivative called "Fire Ridge."
41 Comments on AMD Zen 5 "Granite Ridge" CPUs Reportedly in Mass Production
Nothing under 20% performance is worth the upgrade for me.
So for me the performance increase will be >> 20%.
I'm looking forward to see the first actual benchmarks. :) To build an additional PC, I hope?
I sure hope that you're not upgrading CPUs "every" generation and then selling the old, that would be a tremendous waste of money long term.
15$ for 100 tries…
Also when I resell the 8600x/9600x after few years It will have better value than 7600x, probably $25-30 so its almost free upgrade