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Forums - Sony - AMD and The Sony PS4. Allow Me To Elaborate.

February 21, 2013 by John Taylor

Yesterday, Sony gave a sneak-peek at its next-generation PlayStation®4 (PS4™) game console coming later this year and, here at AMD, we couldn’t be more excited. Bringing a supercharged PC architecture that combines next-gen hardware, software, and the fastest game network in the world. Oh, and this is all powered by a semi-custom designed AMD accelerated processing unit (APU) jointly developed in coordination with Sony!

In fact, the PS4 is the first announced design win based on semi-custom AMD APUs. This further demonstrates our commitment to take AMD technology into adjacent high growth markets as we diversify beyond the PC.

What exactly is a semi-custom APU? Let me elaborate:

At the most basic level, an APU is a single chip that combines general-purpose x86 central processing unit (CPU) cores with a graphics processing unit (GPU) and a variety of system elements, including memory controllers, specialized video decoders, display outputs, etc. Our semi-custom solutions take the same treasure trove of graphics; compute and multi-media IP found in our APUs, and customize them for customers who have a very specific high-volume product that could benefit from AMD’s leading-edge technologies.

In the case of the PS4, we leveraged the building blocks of our 2013 product roadmap – the same technologies you find in the latest AMD APUs powering PCs, ultrathin notebooks and tablets – to create a solution that incorporates our upcoming, low-power AMD “Jaguar” CPU cores with next-generation AMD Radeon™ graphics delivering nearly 2 TFLOPS of compute performance! This unique APU architecture enables game developers to easily harness the power of parallel processing to fundamentally change the console gaming experience. Not only creating the opportunity for new possibilities in software design, but also faster and more fluid graphics.

This is going to be a very exciting year for gamers, especially for those with AMD hardware in their PCs and consoles, as we have even more game-changing (pun intended) announcements still to come.

Look for some more exciting things happening at the Game Developers Conference (GDC) in March when we will provide even more info on how we are working with game developers to make AMD the hardware of choice for running the best games!

John Taylor is the Vice President of Global Communications and Industry Marketing at AMD. His postings are his own opinions and may not represent AMD’s positions, strategies or opinions. Links to third party sites, and references to third party trademarks, are provided for convenience and illustrative purposes only. Unless explicitly stated, AMD is not responsible for the contents of such links, and no third party endorsement of AMD or any of its products is implied.

http://blogs.amd.com/fusion/2013/02/21/amd/



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You posted the article twice :o



UnitSmiley said:
You posted the article twice :o

fixed.



Is this anything new?



ethomaz said:
UnitSmiley said:
You posted the article twice :o

fixed.


You can post it in MS-Discussion also as almost all parts are also true for NextBox :)



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JoeTheBro said:
Is this anything new?

It's the official PR from AMD and there is one thing new or at least a confirmation...

"with next-generation AMD Radeon™ graphics"

It's not GCN (HD 7850 or HD 7970M)... it's a new generation... GCN2 or HD 8000 series. 



ethomaz said:
JoeTheBro said:
Is this anything new?

It's the official PR from AMD and there is one thing new or at least a confirmation...

"with next-generation AMD Radeon™ graphics"

It's not GCN (HD 7850 or HD 7970M)... it's a new generation... GCN2 or HD 8000 series. 


That would be perfect.



e=mc^2

Gaming on: PS4 Pro, Switch, SNES Mini, Wii U, PC (i5-7400, GTX 1060)

That was all gibberish to me. Even though he says what it is I still don't understand.



thanks for the elaboration