By
Tom Krazit
Wednesday, May 24 2006 09:56 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,39361419,00.htm
Advanced Micro Devices on Tuesday unveiled desktop chips based on its AM2
socket, setting the stage for future products based on a new architecture.
The new chips are the Athlon 64 FX-62, which becomes AMD's
highest-performance desktop chip, and the Athlon 64 X2 5000+, the new leader of
AMD's mainstream desktop segment. The chips add support for the faster DDR2 memory standard and
virtualization technology.
AMD has already said it doesn't expect a huge
performance gain from the move to DDR2 memory. The chipmaker is making
modest advances to its chip design strategy this year, as it gets ready for
chips in 2007 based on a new architecture that will use four processing cores and faster HyperTransport
interconnects.
Companies shipping PCs based on the new processors include Hewlett-Packard,
Alienware, Fujitsu-Siemens and Lenovo. The FX-62 processor costs $1,031, while
the X2 5000+ processor costs US$696, in quantities of 1,000 units. More details
are available on AMD's Web site.
AMD is releasing the chips about two months before Intel plans to launch
Conroe, a desktop processor based on its Core architecture. Conroe
is expected to be a major improvement over Intel's current desktop
processors. AMD plans to reveal more details about its strategy for combating
Conroe at a meeting next week for analysts.