The Ryzen 6000s continue to have little diffusion on notebooks

The Ryzen 6000s continue to have little diffusion on notebooks

According to an article published by colleagues at ComputerBase, AMD's Ryzen 6000 CPUs (codenamed “Rembrandt”), launched earlier this year, are still barely present on laptops. In fact, only eleven notebooks have been marketed, including eight made by ASUS, which use the latest mobile chips from the Sunnyvale company.



Photo Credit: AMD This is rather strange, especially considering that the performance offered is certainly up to par with its Intel Alder Lake counterparts, especially as regards the performance in the single thread area. Recall that Ryzen 6000 mobile APUs can count on more efficient CPU cores based on an improved Zen 3 architecture, renamed Zen 3+, integrate an RDNA 2 GPU and are built on TSMC's 6nm process node. Among the innovations compared to Zen 3 we find over 50 optimizations, such as "cppc per thread capability" (which communicates the use per-thread to the operating system and no longer per-core), "Peak Current Control" (which intelligently adjusts the power to save energy) and much more.| ); }


Photo Credit: AMD Today we reported that the debut of the future AMD Zen 5 CPUs could be postponed due to Intel and Apple's capitalization of TSMC's 3nm production node, which could lead to mass production of the chips by 2024/2025. Find more details in our previous dedicated news.