
“With up to eight cores, the Ryzen 5000 C-Series processors give Chromebook users the flexibility to stay unplugged all day without sacrificing performance and productivity.”ĪMD Ryzen™ 5000 C-Series Processors MODELĪMD Ryzen 5000 C-Series processors are coming soon in systems from major OEM partners in the consumer, education, and enterprise markets. “AMD is raising the performance bar for modern Chromebooks,” said Saeid Moshkelani, senior vice president and general manager, Client business unit, AMD.

Wi-Fi® 6E and Bluetooth® 5.2 give users cutting-edge connectivity and more data bandwidth than ever before. With enhanced Radeon™ graphics, Ryzen 5000 C-Series processors for Chrome are expected to offer up to 67% faster responsiveness iii and up to 85% better graphics performance iv than the previous generation. These leadership AMD processors enable an expansion beyond education into the growing consumer and commercial Chrome OS markets. The new processors offer all-day battery life i and leadership performance with up to eight high-performance x86 cores, the most available for Chrome OS ii. With only two Ryzen 5000 Chromebooks arriving at launch, AMD is off to a slow start however, the tide may shift from blue to red if these systems can prove themselves.SANTA CLARA, Calif., (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) - Today, AMD (NASDAQ: AMD) announced new Ryzen™ 5000 C-Series processors, bringing “Zen 3” architecture to premium Chrome OS devices for work and collaboration. The first few models, the HP Elite C645 G2 and Acer Chromebook Spin 514, have slim designs, large displays, and decent specs - they are also available in “Enterprise” editions for small businesses. The largest gains, AMD claims, are with efficiency: the AMD-powered system supposedly achieved 94% longer runtimes in a synthetic benchmark.ĪMD expects these processors to make their way primarily into premium laptops along with a few higher-end mainstream options.

With that in mind, the Ryzen 7 5825C supposedly topped the Core i7-5825C by narrow margins in the web browsing and graphics benchmark and seemingly scored 25% higher on Geekbench 5. AMD wasn’t shy about comparing itself against its main rival, although the benchmarks it shared with us feature 11th Gen chips, not Intel’s latest 12th Gen processors.
