TheOverclocker Issue 29 | Page 20

AMD A10 7850K APU RRP: $185.99 | Website: www.amd.com Test Machine • GIGABYTE G1.Sniper A88X • CORSAIR Dominator Platinum 2x4GB DDR 2666MHZ C10 • INTEL 730 480GB SSD • Cooler Master Silent Pro M2 1500W • Windows 7 64-bit SP1 (Catalyst 13.25 WHQL) A MD has been pushing their APUs rather aggressively since the A10 5800K Trinity from a few short years ago. The idea was and does remain simple. A synergistic relationship between a graphics core and a traditional serial compute core or host CPU. From just having these on the same package to having these two parts unified on a single die. AMD has for the most part done something incredible and unprecedented with the latest Kaveri APUs. Performance and other factors aside, just from 20 The OverClocker Issue 29 | 2014 an engineering point of view this is a milestone for AMD and most certainly a first for general computing platforms. AMD’s journey to this point hasn’t been easy, but the APUs are by and large a successful part of AMDs strategy and it is fairly obvious why much of the communications from the company is centred around their APUs or at least more so than their CPUs which have actually grown long in the tooth for the most part. APUs however over a slew of features out the box like a very competent graphics subsystem, native USB3.0 support, SATA 6Gbps and a PCI-Express 3.0 complex. In essence there is some parity with AMD’s latest APU platform and what INTEL offers on their products. The only difference then mostly is performance and power consumption which can be further broken down into many other aspects. We won’t go into the really detailed parts of what makes Kaveri significantly different (at least from a graphics perspective) from Richland which it’s predecessor. As AMD did not provide this information to us amongst other things, but the good news is that it is using the same GCN architecture as found on the 7000 series graphics cards. In practical terms this not only means better performance, but it also means that the Kaveri APUs have full DirectX11.2 hardware support along with OpenCL, Mantle and obviously the latest OpenGL support as well. Assuming that the performance is there, it is easily the most feature rich IGP on the planet today. Physically the new APU die is massive, at over 2.4Billion gates, compared to less than 1.4Bilion on the outgoing Trinity APUs. The process node is smaller though and Global Foundries 28nm SHP process has obviously allowed AMD to manufacture these at a reasonable cost without sacrificing too much in terms of frequency or heat output. These may be built on a 28nm process,