It was a matter of time before the AMD processors 7nm "Renoir" APUs on the Desktop, and the first chip in the series that makes its appearance is the Ryzen 7 4700G.
Πis for the first AMD APU to receive the Ryzen 7 "label", as it has 8 cores and 16 processing threads. The The 4700G iGPU is a hybrid between "Vega" and "Navi" architectures.
Renoir's iGPU features the Simga subsystems of the "Vega" architecture in conjunction with the image and multimedia cameras of the "Navi" architecture. The NGCUs will be 8 with 512 stream processors. Compared to the "Picasso", Renoir CUs are less (8 vs 11), but with increased timing AMD is trying to reverse this disadvantage. The CPU will have 512 KB L2 cache per kernel and 8 MB L3 cache (4MB per CCX). An AoTS (Ashes of the Singularity) run of this processor, combined with an RX 5700 made its appearance on social media.
"Renoir" desktop processors are important to AMD, as if they come at the right price, they neutralize the advantage that Intel has (in the i3-i5 series) with the built-in iGPU. Therefore, these processors could dominate the vast majority of systems that are not intended for gaming, but need serious processing power.
Finally, it is possible for the processor to appear in the UserBenchmark database with the code name "100-000000149-40_40/30_Y“. In this submission, the processor is displayed with base clock 3 GHz and boost clock 4 GHz, in combination with an ASRock B550 Taichi motherboard and Micron standard DIMM RAM.
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