
Advanced Micro Devices on Wednesday launched a new desktop APU code named Richland which combines CPU and GPU performance in a single package that the chip maker said at the Computex show in Taiwan will hands-down beat rival Intel's offerings in the mainstream market.
Richland is the next stage in AMD's A-Series APU lineup, which kicked off with Llano-class chips in 2011 and was followed up with Trinity last year. The chip maker said its Richland series boosts its 3DMark Fire Strike benchmarking score by 21 percent from the Trinity generation and has scored double-digit performance increases in other key benchmarking tests as compared with the preceding generation.
AMD's Richland, utilizing the chip maker's Radeon 8000 series graphics, provides 779 GFLOPs of GPU compute performance to supplement a quad-core x86-based central processor capable of up to 4.4GHz clock speeds out of the box.
The new Richland accelerated processors drop into AMD's FM2 socket, ensuring upgradeability from the chip maker's earlier platforms and support for the A55, A75, and A85X chipsets, while adding DDR3-2133 support and enhanced Turbo Core clock throttling technology from the chip maker.
Patrick Moorhead, principal analyst for Moor Insights & Strategy, said the new Richland APUs are well positioned for a mainstream desktop PC market where prices have been dropping but performance expectations have remained constant.

Indeed, in introducing its new Richland lineup, AMD offered an upgrade path from previous generation A-series chips starting with the currently available $42 dual-core, 3.2GHz A4-400 and topping out at the $129 quad-core, 4.2GHz A10-5800K into the new Richland-based $69 dual-core, 4.1GHz A6-6400K on up to the $142 quad-core, 4.4GHz A10-6800K APU.

VIEW ALL PHOTOS IN GALLERY
