AMD has revealed its latest AI chips at Computex, setting its sights on rivals NVIDIA and Intel. CEO Lisa Su presented the Ryzen AI 300 series designed for next-generation AI laptops, which will support Microsoft’s AI chatbot, Copilot. Additionally, she introduced the Ryzen 9000 series for desktops, promoted as the fastest consumer PC processors available for gaming and content creation. Both product lines are scheduled for release in July.
“AI is our number one priority and we’re at the beginning of an incredibly exciting time for the industry as AI transforms virtually every business, improves our quality of life, and reshapes every part of the computing market,” said chair and CEO of AMD Lisa Su during the Computex tech conference in Taipei.
AMD also outlined its data center chip roadmap, announcing that the Instinct MI325X will be available in Q4, with the MI350 and MI400 series slated for 2025 and 2026. CEO Lisa Su also previewed the fifth-generation EPYC server processors, which are anticipated in the second half of the year. Similar to Nvidia, AMD relies on Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company for chip production. These new chips will feature the cutting-edge “Zen 5” architecture.
“You’re gonna see Zen 5 everywhere from supercomputers to data centers and PCs,” said Su.
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