It has been filtered out a processor AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 160 which draws attention, not only for its name, but also for its internal distribution of cores. It is a model equipped with 8 cores and 16 threads, of which 3 of them are Zen 5 and the remaining 5 use the more compact Zen 5c architecture.
They will run at 2 GHz base and 4.3 GHz boost, with 16 MB of cache (8 MB L2 and 8 MB L3). With this data, they have achieved 2,514 points in the Geekbench single-core test, and 11,772 points in the multi-core test.
The nomenclature of the AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 160 is striking, since taking into account the launch range and the fact that it uses Zen 5 and Zen 5c cores, it will be positioned as a model of the Ryzen AI 300 series, but its numerical designation will be 160. It seems that this designation is the one used internally by AMD before opting for the 300 series, so possibly when they reach the market we will see it with the name of AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 360.
The GPU will be the AMD Radeon 870M based on the new architecture “RDNA 3.5″an evolution of RNDA 3 that is expected to bring a significant performance leap. Also expected is the inclusion of the NPU based on the new XDNA 2 architecture for local AI acceleration in order to integrate into Microsoft-certified Copilot+PCs.
Yesterday we learned that the PRO variants of the Ryzen AI 300 will arrive in October, so it would not be unreasonable to think that this AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 160/360 will also arrive during those dates.
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Antonio Delgado
Computer Engineer by training, editor and hardware analyst at Geeknetic since 2011. I love to dissect everything that passes through my hands, especially the latest hardware that we receive here to do reviews. In my free time I tinker with 3D printers, drones and other gadgets. For anything you need, here I am.
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