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+14 +1
AMD says its next PC chip trumps Intel with 12 'compute cores' and smoother gaming
A decade ago, AMD brought us the first dual-core x86 processor. Then, starting in 2008, the company came out with tri-core and quad-core designs in quick...
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+19 +1
Rumors suggest AMD is eyeing a comeback with its new 16-core chip
Can AMD's rumored Zen APU be the savior the company has direly needed for the past few years? Leaked slides from Fudzilla detail the upcoming release.
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+12 +1
Tested: AMD's Frame Rate Target Control delivers real benefits for Radeon gamers
AMD is releasing frame rate control for the 3xx series! This will help cards lower temperatures and consume less power, since cards can be producing 100+ fps which would be wasted on monitors that do not have high enough refresh rates.
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+7 +1
AMD Adds a Fix to Resolve Fury X Whine Noise - TechFrag
Fury X pump "coil whine" issues are being fixed -- revised fury X cards with minimal pump whine are being shipped out.
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Current Event+2 +1
AMD LiquidVR™ Technology
AMD's pioneering Virtual Reality technology is poised to bring better content, comfort, and compatibility to VR applications
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+2 +1
AMD Releases Catalyst 15.7 WHQL Drivers: Crossfire Freesync, Win10 Support, & More
After a brief detour for AMD’s driver team where they diverged their drivers for the Radeon 300 series and R9 Fury X launch, AMD has reunified their drivers with the release of Catalyst 15.7. The WHQL release, the first such release from AMD since Catalyst 14.12 in December, includes a number of major feature additions and performance improvements relative to both the previous 15.6 drivers for AMD’s older cards, and the even older 14.12 WHQL drivers.
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+5 +1
AMD R9 Fury reviews
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+16 +2
The AMD Radeon R9 Fury Review, Feat. Sapphire & ASUS
A bit over two weeks ago AMD launched their new flagship video card, the Radeon R9 Fury X. Based on the company’s new Fiji GPU, the R9 Fury X brought with it significant performance improvements to AMD’s lineup, with AMD’s massive Fiji greatly increasing the card’s shading resources. Meanwhile Fiji also marked the introduction of High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) in to consumer products, giving the R9 Fury X a significant leg up in memory bandwidth. Overall AMD put together a very impressive...
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+2 +1
AMD has 'priority access' to HBM2, an advantage over NVIDIA
The future of video card technology is HBM, with AMD holding the keys to 'priority access' of HBM2 production
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+8 +1
Collaboration and Open Source at AMD: Blender Cycles - AMD
This article is part of an occasional series about what developers can do when they collaborate. AMD is a real believer in open source projects. Our developers actively contribute to ...
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+11 +1
How To Make Counter-Strike: Global Offensive Run Much Faster On AMD Catalyst For Linux
Should you be using a Radeon graphics card with the AMD Catalyst Linux driver and are disappointed by the poor performance, there is a very easy workaround for gaining much better performance under Linux... In some cases a simple tweak will yield around 40% better performance!
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+2 +1
AMD might have found the solution to low Radeon R9 Fury X stock
UMC looks to be helping AMD's low supply of Fury X video cards.
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+1 +1
AMD begins shipments of Radeon R9 Nano to partners, images hit the web
KitGuru Says: Keeping in mind that AMD has started to ship samples of the product to its partners, it is now a matter of time before the final specs and performance numbers of the AMD Radeon R9 Nano leak.
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+2 +1
Radeon R9 Fury graphics card review: AMD's furious bid for enthusiast gaming supremacy
AMD's air-cooled counterpart to the liquid-chilled Radeon Fury X doesn't topple its big brother, but the Asus Strix version of the Radeon Fury firmly outpunches Nvidia's GTX 980.
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+8 +1
The AMD Radeon R9 Fury Is Currently A Disaster On Linux
When AMD announced the Radeon R9 Fury line-up powered by the "Fiji" GPU with High Bandwidth Memory, I was genuinely very excited to get my hands on this graphics card. The tech sounded great and offered up a lot of potential, and once finally finding an R9 Fury in stock, shelled out nearly $600 for this graphics card. Unfortunately though, thanks to the current state of the Catalyst Linux driver, the R9 Fury on Linux is a gigantic waste for OpenGL workloads.
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+2 +1
Both Nvidia And AMD Sides of The GameWorks Story
For this exclusive piece we reached out to Nvidia and AMD to hear both sides of the GameWorks debate and get to the bottom of the issue.
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+1 +1
FreeSync gets a friend: Future Intel CPUs will support Adaptive-Sync standard
Intel may soon get into the variable refresh rate game with its integrated GPUs.
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+15 +1
Feral Interactive Buys More AMD Hardware to Optimize Linux Games
Feral Interactive is a studio that specialized in porting games for the Linux and Mac OS X platforms, and they have already launched a number of titles. The developers are now making an extra effort to make their games work better on AMD hardware.
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+1 +1
The Most Power Efficient & Best Value Of AMD GPUs For Linux Gamers
Earlier this week I published some performance-per-watt and performance-per-dollar NVIDIA Linux benchmarks while in this article today are similar tests done on the AMD Radeon front with the Catalyst proprietary driver on Ubuntu Linux.
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+20 +1
AMD’s R9 Nano crams a full Fury X into a tiny 6-inch form factor
£530 ($649) Nano sports full 4096 stream processors, 4GB HBM, but needs just 175W.
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