Insight AMD Embedded Gaming Solutions
Stephen Turnbull, Director of Product Management and Business Development, Embedded Solutions, AMD
For 50 years AMD has driven innovation in high-performance computing, graphics and
visualization technologies ― the building blocks for gaming, immersive platforms and the datacenter. Hundreds of millions of consumers, leading Fortune 500 businesses and cutting-edge scientific research facilities around the world rely on AMD technology daily to improve how they live, work and play. AMD employees around the world are focused on building great products that push the boundaries of what is possible.
AMD is bringing the same high-quality motion graphics and experiences seen in modern consumer gaming devices into their Embedded range designed for the international land-based gaming sector
AMD’s ability to provide customers with high performance CPUs and GPUs that can power the video and graphics demanded by modern gaming has been showcased in recent months by new platforms basing their technology on the latest AMD Embedded processors.
Casino Technology have announced their support for the AMD Ryzen Embedded V1000 SoC, bringing discrete-GPU calibre graphics and multimedia processing to their slot machine customers.
Quixant are also supporting the AMD Ryzen Embedded R1000 SoC in their new generation of gaming controllers, the QXi-7000 LITE, to push their game design to the limit.
Te V1000 brings CPU and SPU technology together in one place, capable of running up to four 4k displays from one system. Te R1000 provides a power efficient option whilst
providing up to four times better CPU and graphics performance per dollar than the competition.
Beyond SoCs, AMD offer embedded GPUs to enable immersive visual experiences whilst also supporting efficient thermal design power profiles. AMD delivers three discrete GPU classes to customers; the AMD Embedded Radeon ultra-high-performance, high- performance and power-efficient embedded GPUs. Tese three classes enable a wide range of performance and power consumption, offering features the embedded industry demands including planned longevity, enhanced support and support for embedded operating systems.
AMD have launched two new versions of the AMD Embedded Radeon GPUs, the E9650 and the E9390. Tese two cards are in the PCle form factor, use 8GB of GDDR5 memory and support
AMD have launched two new versions of the AMD Embedded Radeon GPUs, the E9650 and the E9390. These two cards are in the PCle form factor, use 8GB of GDDR5 memory and support 4k high-speed video, 3D visualisations and other compute-intensive graphics applications seen in casino and arcade gaming.
P56 NEWSWIRE / INTERACTIVE / MARKET DATA
4k high-speed video, 3D visualisations and other compute-intensive graphics applications seen in casino and arcade gaming. Te E9560 delivers up to 11 per cent more performance compared to the existing E9550 with 36 compute units, a TDP of 130W or less and up to 5.7 theoretical TFLOPS of performance. Te E9390 has a TDP of 75W or less with 28 compute units and provides up to 3.9 theoretical TFLOPS of performance for AMD customers looking for better power efficiency.
AMD have announced that the E9560 and E9390, as well as their existing Polaris architecture E-series GPUs, will have planned availability until 2022 in response to the memory used by GDDR5 graphics cards being phased out across the industry for the updated standard, GDDR6.
G3 spoke exclusively with Stephen Turnbull, Director of Product Management and Business Development, Embedded Solutions, about AMD’s plans for 2020.
What differentiates AMD’s embedded gaming solutions from its competitors?
Compared to competitors, AMD provides casino gaming customers with access to both high- performance embedded CPUs and
Expanding the digital horizon for game developers in 2020
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