AMD claims leadership across nearly all CPU categories

AMD stakes its claim as the top CPU performer globally, boasting world records in supercomputing and local Artificial Intelligence processing.

AMD has unveiled a major milestone for its processor portfolio, asserting itself as the fastest in almost all CPU categories worldwide. The company´s latest 4th Gen EPYC ´Genoa´ CPUs, paired with Instinct MI300A GPUs, have secured first and second place in the Top500 list of supercomputers. This positioning cements AMD’s dominance in high-performance computing infrastructure, a sector historically driven by cutthroat competition from rivals.

In the consumer computing landscape, AMD´s Ryzen AI Max ´Strix Halo´ processor stands out by offering the most powerful Artificial Intelligence-focused PC chip on the market. Partners can configure systems with up to 96 GB of unified 256-bit LPDDR5X memory, granting ´Strix Halo´ the unique capability to locally process massive 128-billion-parameter Artificial Intelligence models. This feat makes it the only PC processor currently able to handle workloads of such size without cloud dependency, marking a significant achievement for local Artificial Intelligence enablement and privacy-focused workflows.

AMD´s competitive edge extends to desktop and mobile form factors. The Ryzen 9 9950X3D ´Granite Ridge-X´ benchmarks ahead of the Intel Core Ultra 9 285K in both gaming and productivity. For laptops, the Ryzen 9 9955HX3D ´Fire Range-X,´ a mobile variant of the 9950X3D, claims the top spot in portable computing performance. The server sector is dominated by AMD’s 5th Gen EPYC ´Turin´ chips, recognized for high core density, broad memory channels, and extensive PCIe support, leading in performance per socket. Specialized devices like consoles utilize Ryzen semi-custom chips, while the Threadripper 9000 ´Shimada Peak´ reigns over high-end desktop and workstation classes. Despite these accomplishments, AMD lags in mainstream mobile U- and H-series CPUs, where competition from Intel’s ´Arrow Lake-U´ and ´Arrow Lake-H´ series remains strong. These targeted weaknesses highlight the only notable gaps in AMD’s otherwise sweeping performance leadership.

72

Impact Score

NVIDIA and Doosan broaden physical Artificial Intelligence partnership

NVIDIA and Doosan Group are expanding work across robotics, autonomous equipment, power infrastructure and advanced materials. The partnership links NVIDIA accelerated computing platforms with Doosan businesses serving industrial automation, energy systems and data center hardware.

Chatbot liability suits test Artificial Intelligence safety law

A Florida lawsuit targeting ChatGPT’s maker signals a new product liability threat for Artificial Intelligence companies. The fight could turn on unsettled questions about platform immunity, speech protections, causation, and federal safety rules.

Canada pushes Artificial Intelligence sovereignty strategy

Canada has unveiled an Artificial Intelligence for All strategy focused on reducing reliance on foreign cloud and Artificial Intelligence providers. The plan mirrors the EU’s new sovereignty push and sets targets for adoption, infrastructure and jobs.

Contact Us

Got questions? Use the form to contact us.

Contact Form

Clicking next sends a verification code to your email. After verifying, you can enter your message.