Advanced Micro Devices has set aside its current difficulties and continued to confront Intel for the gamer and PC enthusiast sector.
The company has released the latest of its FX series of desktop processors that offer as many as eight cores, more speed than previous versions and the company’s new Piledriver architecture.
AMD unveiled the first four “Vishera” chips, which range from the four-core FX-4300 to the eight-core FX-8320 and FX-8350. Also included is the FX-6300, a six-core processor. Company officials said the Piledriver architecture will offer users up to a 15 percent increase in performance, and that the power boost will come at a lower price than that of comparable Intel processors. Pricing for the chips ranges from $122 (£76) for the FX-4300 to $195 (£122) for the FX-8350.
AMD officials said the FX-8350 costs about $40 (£25) less than Intel’s Core i5-3570K; the price of the FX-4300 is about the same as that of the Core i3-2120.
All the chips are unlocked, enabling users to over-clock them to get higher speeds out of all those cores. The chips range in speed from 4.0GHz to 4.2GHz, but the higher-end chips reportedly could be over-clocked to hit speeds of as much as 5GHz.
The new chips come at a time when PC sales are struggling, thanks to the uncertain global economy, the rise of tablets and smartphones, and the anticipated release of Microsoft’s Windows 8 operating system. Desktop PCs in particular are feeling the pinch, continuing to lose ground to notebooks in the PC space. Analysts with IDC and Gartner said that PC sales in the third quarter fell between 8 and 9 percent from the same period in 2011.
However, there are still people who want their desktops, according to Sobon.
“You remember desktops, right? Those things that were supposed to die with notebooks and will most certainly die with tablets?” she asked in an 22 October post on AMD’s game blog. “Wrong. Never underestimate the power of a vocal, loyal, educated group of enthusiasts. Whatever the industry, they are highly influential. And they deserve to be.”
The new Vishera chips are aimed at those enthusiasts.
“As we seem to move ever more toward a ‘my device is cooler looking than yours’ world, maybe it’s easy to forget what isn’t the ‘shiny object’ anymore,” Sobon wrote. “The ubiquitous desktop tower of the ’90s. But to a PC Enthusiast – and there are tens of millions of them – within that tower lies a customised, personalised vessel for tweaking, tuning and over-clocking through the formula of your choice: air, water, nitrogen, helium. The passion of the PC Enthusiast is singular in this industry. Yes, there are the Apple and Google fanatics. But nothing compares to the individuals who ‘Build Their Own.'”
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Originally published on eWeek.
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