At the time of release, the EPYC 9754 had a suggested retail price of $11,900, which is still the listed price on AMD’s ...
TechRadar has found shedloads of AMD’s EPYC “Bergamo” 9754 server-grade processor from the EPYC 9004 series going dirt cheap ...
ASRock has unleashed a beast of a motherboard for AMD's EPYC 9005 and 9004 server processors; home users need not apply.
AMD already uses a socket for its Instinct MI300A monster chips, specifically an SH5 socket, which looks suspiciously like its SP5 socket for EPYC server CPUs. Intel, on the other hand ...
The Turin chips represent an evolution over Genoa, and this is necessarily so given that the two chips have to plug into the same SP5 server socket. If you want to do anything big, you usually need a ...
The centerpiece of the A900 is AMD's 4th gen Epyc Genoa processors. The base configuration features dual 64-core Epyc 9124 ...
When it comes to desktop and laptop processors, the two biggest names in town are Intel and AMD. Qualcomm is making inroads, but if you want peak performance, Intel and AMD make the best ...
Launched under the Epyc 9005 branding, the 5th-gen Epyc CPU family is compatible with AMD's SP5 socket, just like the Zen 4-based "Genoa" and "Bergamo" processors, and features two distinct designs.
Upgrading your processor often feels like upgrading your smartphone—it's exciting to unlock new performance capabilities, but it comes with a frustrating reality: you will probably need a new ...
HPE, Dell, Lenovo, and Supermicro have all detailed forthcoming servers featuring AMD’s latest data center GPU, the MI325X, and server CPUs, the 5th Generation Epyc family, previously known as Turin.
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. AMD launched its fifth-gen EPYC ‘Turin’ processors here in San Francisco at its Advancing ...
Maybe you splurged on a decked-out motherboard for your AMD or Intel build with a model that's chock full of bells and whistles, as well as copious overclocking potential. That's all well and good ...