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AMD Restructures to Combine Graphics and Chip Units

Struggling chipmaker AMD has been trying all sorts of new business tactics to keep itself afloat after two solid years of losses in its competition with Intel—including spinning off its fabs into GlobalFoundries so, technically, AMD has no manufacturing capability of its own anymore.n Now, the company has announced a major restructuring that combines its chip unit with the remnants of graphics developer ATI in a move to spur development of integrated graphics and computing processors. And as part of the reorganization, the senior VP of AMD’s microprocessor group, Randy Allen, will be leaving the company.

“We are tightening our focus on delivering the winning products and platforms our customers want based on AMD’s industry-leading microprocessor and graphics technologies,” said AMD president and CEO Dirk Meyer, in a statement. “The next generation of innovation in the computing industry will be grounded in the fusion of microprocessor and graphics technologies. With these changes, we are putting the right organization in place to help enable the future of computing.”

As part of the reorg, AMD is creating three other operating groups in addition to the combined chip group: one will focus on technology research, one on sales, and one one marketing.

AMD acquired graphic developer ATI Technologies back in 2006; it has since had to repeatedly write down the value of the transaction as the business has failed to live up to AMD’s expectation—AMD also sold off ATI’s mobile graphics technology to Qualcomm early this year.

AMD offered no reason for Randy Allen’s departure.

Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…

Millions of AMD chips are being ignored in major security flaw fix

Hundreds of millions of AMD CPUs are facing a new vulnerability called Sinkhole. The exploit, which was first reported by Wired, impacts processors dating back to 2006, and it spans nearly all of AMD's products. That list includes Ryzen, Threadripper, and Epyc CPUs across desktop and mobile, as well as AMD's data center GPUs. Despite Sinkhole hitting some of AMD's best processors, only the most recent batch of chips will receive a patch that fixes the vulnerability.

AMD isn't patching Ryzen 1000, 2000, or 3000 processors, nor is it patching Threadripper 1000 and 2000 CPUs, reports Tom's Hardware. The company claims that these older CPUs fall outside of its support window, despite the fact that millions are still in use. Still, even the most recent Ryzen 3000 chips were released over five years ago, and it makes sense that AMD would want to focus its support on new chips like the Ryzen 5 9600X and Ryzen 7 9700X.

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This new feature may give new AMD chips a 21% gaming boost

If you own one of AMD's latest processors, you're in luck. With the release of Ryzen 9000, AMD added a feature called Optimized Performance Profile (OPP), which lets you easily overclock your RAM.

There's more, though. If you have both a Ryzen 9000 CPU, such as the Ryzen 7 9700X, and an MSI motherboard, a new BIOS update can help you improve the gaming performance of your CPU by up to 21%. This is due to MSI's own stack of features, which now includes MSI Memory Try It and High-Efficiency Mode.

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AMD’s new flagship chip just did something unprecedented

AMD's upcoming flagship desktop chip, the Ryzen 9 9950X, hasn't even hit the market yet, but early benchmark results are already showing promising performance. According to a recently shared benchmark score, the 9950X can reach impressive boost clock speeds of up to 6GHz.

X (formerly Twitter) user @9950pro posted a screenshot of a Geekbench 6 result for a Ryzen 9 9950X engineering sample. The CPU was paired with an Asus ROG Crosshair X670E motherboard and 32GB of DDR5 memory. Notably, the clock speeds reached 5.95GHz — nearly 300 MHz above its stock maximum boost clock. In these tests, the overclocked chip scored 3,706 points in single-core performance and 26,047 points in multi-core performance, highlighting its substantial capability.

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