AMD Announces Worldwide Availability of AMD Ryzen™ PRO 3000 Series Processors Designed to Power the Modern Business PC

– Powerful per­for­mance for ener­gy-effi­ci­ent busi­ness desk­top PCs from pro­ces­sors offe­ring up to 12 cores – 

– Strong port­fo­lio of enter­pri­se offe­rings from glo­bal com­mer­cial PC manu­fac­tu­r­ers inclu­ding HP and Lenovo –

SANTA CLARA, Calif. 

Today, AMD (NASDAQ: AMD) announ­ced the glo­bal avai­la­bi­li­ty of its new AMD Ryzen™ PRO 3000 Series desk­top pro­ces­sor lin­e­up, along with new AMD Ryzen™ PRO pro­ces­sors with Rade­on™ Vega Gra­phics and AMD Ath­lon™ PRO pro­ces­sors with Rade­on™ Vega Gra­phics. The AMD Ryzen PRO and Ath­lon PRO desk­top pro­ces­sors com­bi­ne powerful per­for­mance, built-in secu­ri­ty fea­tures, and com­mer­cial-gra­de relia­bi­li­ty to get the job done. Start­ing in Q4 2019, robust enter­pri­se desk­tops from HP and Leno­vo powered by AMD Ryzen PRO and Ath­lon PRO desk­top pro­ces­sors are sla­ted to be available.

The launch of the Ryzen PRO 3000 Series pro­ces­sors for com­mer­cial and small busi­ness users is the latest demons­tra­ti­on of our com­mit­ment to tech­no­lo­gy lea­der­ship in 2019,” said Sai­ed Mosh­kela­ni, seni­or vice pre­si­dent and gene­ral mana­ger, AMD Cli­ent Com­pu­te. “Desi­gned spe­ci­fi­cal­ly to effi­ci­ent­ly data-crunch, design, com­po­se, and crea­te – AMD Ryzen PRO and Ath­lon PRO pro­ces­sors acce­le­ra­te enhan­ced busi­ness pro­duc­ti­vi­ty while offe­ring pro­tec­tion safe­guards with built-in secu­ri­ty fea­tures, such as full sys­tem memo­ry encryp­ti­on and a dedi­ca­ted, on-die secu­ri­ty processor.”

Powe­ring ver­sa­ti­le designs from both HP and Leno­vo and desi­gned to fit vir­tual­ly every office envi­ron­ment, the AMD Ryzen 9 PRO 3900, AMD Ryzen 7 PRO 3700, and AMD Ryzen 5 PRO 3600 CPUs are based on the world’s most advan­ced 7nm “Zen 2” core archi­tec­tu­re. Offe­ring up to 12 cores and 24 threads – the most of any busi­ness pro­ces­sor1 only with the AMD Ryzen 9 PRO 3900 pro­ces­sor – they pro­vi­de a high-per­for­mance and high-effi­ci­en­cy design built for even the most rigo­rous busi­ness envi­ron­ments and are power effi­ci­ent wit­hout sacri­fi­ci­ng performance.

Supreme Productivity

AMD Ryzen PRO 3000 Series pro­ces­sors deli­ver high­ly com­pe­ti­ti­ve per­for­mance for busi­ness desktops;

  • Ryzen 9 PRO 3900 and Ryzen 7 PRO 3700 brings up to 2X fas­ter per­for­mance than the com­pe­ti­ti­on at the same power, ensu­ring a cool and quiet PC usa­ge envi­ron­ment2;
  • Ryzen PRO pro­ces­sors offer up to an esti­ma­ted 127% fas­ter data-crun­ching ver­sus the com­pe­ti­ti­on, from sol­ving equa­tions to run­ning simu­la­ti­ons in various indus­tries inclu­ding finan­cial ser­vices, life sci­ence, and ener­gy3;
  • Tech­no­lo­gy lea­der­ship with the most advan­ced 7nm SoC and “Zen 2” core archi­tec­tu­re, up to 12 cores at only 65W TDP for sel­ect models.4

Powerful Protection

Every AMD Ryzen PRO pro­ces­sor con­ta­ins a powerful, built-in secu­ri­ty co-pro­ces­sor that runs AMD Guard­MI tech­no­lo­gy, which is dedi­ca­ted to hel­ping pro­tect users’ PCs. AMD Memo­ry Guard5 helps defend against cold boot attacks with full sys­tem memo­ry encryp­ti­on, and AMD tech­no­lo­gy sup­ports and com­ple­ments OEM secu­ri­ty fea­tures and Win­dows Secu­ri­ty, inclu­ding Leno­vo ThinkS­hield™ and HP Sure Start™, among others.

OEM Support

In the coming months, enter­pri­se cus­to­mers will be able to purcha­se Ryzen PRO pro­ces­sor-based sys­tems from top PC ven­dors inclu­ding HP and Lenovo.

HP EliteDesk 705 G5 Series with AMD

HP con­ti­nues to streng­then its com­mit­ment to inno­va­ti­ve PC tech­no­lo­gies and col­la­bo­ra­ting with our part­ners has never been more important,” said Andy Rho­des, Glo­bal Head Com­mer­cial Per­so­nal Sys­tems, HP Inc. “Powered by AMD Ryzen PRO pro­ces­sors, our HP Eli­te­De­sk 705 G5 series deli­ver the robust per­for­mance and pro­duc­ti­vi­ty that today’s work­force requi­res, in indus­try-lea­ding com­pact designs.”

The high-per­for­mance HP Eli­te­De­sk 705 G5 Series offers enter­pri­se-class pro­duc­ti­vi­ty with the latest AMD Ryzen™ PRO pro­ces­sors in your choice of form factors.

  • The HP Eli­te­De­sk 705 G5 Small Form Fac­tor is the world’s first AMD desk­top PC with dual‑M.2 dri­ve capa­bi­li­ty6 and deli­vers impres­si­ve value with powerful per­for­mance, expan­da­bili­ty, mana­gea­bi­li­ty and resi­li­ent secu­ri­ty for the modern work­place. The HP Eli­te­De­sk 705 G5 SFF will be available in Sep­tem­ber start­ing at $669 USD.
  • The HP Eli­te­De­sk 705 G5 Desk­top Mini is the smal­lest and most powerful AMD Ultra Small Form Fac­tor (USFF) busi­ness-class PC7. With many con­fi­gura­ble opti­ons, and built-in secu­ri­ty and mana­gea­bi­li­ty in a com­pact design, this desk­top mini pairs with the HP Mini-in-One 24 Dis­playto revamp the modern work­place. The HP Eli­te­De­sk 705 G5 DM will be available in Novem­ber start­ing at $679 USD.

Lenovo ThinkCentre Desktops with AMD

Leno­vo Think­Cent­re desk­tops have been available with AMD pro­ces­sors — offe­ring gre­at per­for­mance, secu­ri­ty and ener­gy-saving fea­tures — for more than ten years. That heri­ta­ge con­ti­nues with the Think­Cent­re M75s‑1 small form fac­tor (SFF) and M75q‑1 Tiny form fac­tor offe­ring the latest Ryzen PRO pro­ces­sors, up to 12-cores on the SFF model.

The clean and sleek look and feel is backed up with strong secu­ri­ty and mana­gea­bi­li­ty fea­tures. New for 2019 AMD plat­forms is the Smart Power-On fea­ture allo­wing users to mount the desk­tops in more fle­xi­ble loca­ti­ons, such as a wall, under a desk or behind a moni­tor. Sim­ply press ALT+P on the key­board to power on the sys­tem. The M75q‑1 Tiny also now includes a USB Type‑C port and an HDMI port as stan­dard and the opti­on of two addi­tio­nal user-defi­ned ports.

Our cus­to­mers want smart and secu­re desk­tops to meet the day-to-day rigors of work­place demands with the fle­xi­bi­li­ty to adapt to modern workspaces,” said Tom But­ler, exe­cu­ti­ve direc­tor, WW com­mer­cial port­fo­lio and pro­duct manage­ment, Leno­vo. “We equip sel­ect Think­Cent­re models with sta­te-of-the-art AMD pro­ces­sors that deli­ver gre­at per­for­mance and secu­ri­ty fea­tures in one device.”

AMD Ryzen™ PRO desktop processors:

Model Cores/
Threads
TDP9 (Watts) Boost/Base Freq.10 (GHz) L2 + L3 Cache (MB)
AMD Ryzen™ 9 PRO 3900 12 / 24 65W 4.3 / up to 3.1 70
AMD Ryzen™ 7 PRO 3700 8 / 16 65W 4.4 / up to 3.6 36
AMD Ryzen™ 5 PRO 3600 6 / 12 65W 4.2 / up to 3.6 35

AMD Ryzen™ PRO desktop processors with Radeon™ Vega Graphics:

Model Cores/
Threads
TDP9 (Watts) Boost/Base Freq.10 (GHz) L2 + L3 Cache (MB) Gra­phics Com­pu­te Units
AMD Ryzen™ 5 PRO 3400G 4 / 8 65W 4.2 / up to 3.7 6 11 CUs
AMD Ryzen™ 5 PRO 3400GE 4 / 8 35W 4.0 / up to 3.3 6 11 CUs
AMD Ryzen™ 3 PRO 3200G 4 / 4 65W 4.0 / up to 3.6 6 8 CUs
AMD Ryzen™ 3 PRO 3200GE 4 / 4 35W 3.8 / up to 3.3 6 8 CUs

AMD Athlon™ PRO desktop processors with Radeon™ Vega Graphics:

Model Cores/
Threads
TDP9 (Watts) Boost/Base Freq.10

(GHz)

L2 + L3 Cache (MB) Gra­phics Com­pu­te Units
AMD Ath­lon™ PRO 300GE 2 / 4 35W 3.4 / up to 3.4 5 3 CUs

Supporting Resources

About 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. For more infor­ma­ti­on about how AMD is enab­ling today and inspi­ring tomor­row, visit the AMD (NASDAQ:AMDweb­siteblogFace­book and Twit­ter pages. 

Cautionary Statement  

This press release con­ta­ins for­ward-loo­king state­ments con­cer­ning Advan­ced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD) inclu­ding the fea­tures, func­tion­a­li­ty, avai­la­bi­li­ty, timing, deploy­ment and expec­ta­ti­ons of AMD’s pro­ducts, inclu­ding future offe­rings with AMD Ryzen™ PRO pro­ces­sor-based sys­tems from PC ven­dors, which are made pur­su­ant to the Safe Har­bor pro­vi­si­ons of the Pri­va­te Secu­ri­ties Liti­ga­ti­on Reform Act of 1995. For­ward-loo­king state­ments are com­mon­ly iden­ti­fied by words such as “would,” “intends,” “belie­ves,” “expects,” “may,” “will,” “should,” “seeks,” “intends,” “plans,” “pro for­ma,” “esti­ma­tes,” “anti­ci­pa­tes,” or the nega­ti­ve of the­se words and phra­ses, other varia­ti­ons of the­se words and phra­ses or com­pa­ra­ble ter­mi­no­lo­gy. Inves­tors are cau­tio­ned that the for­ward-loo­king state­ments in this docu­ment are based on cur­rent beliefs, assump­ti­ons and expec­ta­ti­ons, speak only as of the date of this docu­ment and invol­ve risks and uncer­tain­ties that could cau­se actu­al results to dif­fer mate­ri­al­ly from cur­rent expec­ta­ti­ons. Such state­ments are sub­ject to cer­tain known and unknown risks and uncer­tain­ties, many of which are dif­fi­cult to pre­dict and gene­ral­ly bey­ond AMD’s con­trol, that could cau­se actu­al results and other future events to dif­fer mate­ri­al­ly from tho­se expres­sed in, or impli­ed or pro­jec­ted by, the for­ward-loo­king infor­ma­ti­on and state­ments. Mate­ri­al fac­tors that could cau­se actu­al results to dif­fer mate­ri­al­ly from cur­rent expec­ta­ti­ons include, wit­hout limi­ta­ti­on, the fol­lo­wing: Intel Corporation’s domi­nan­ce of the micro­pro­ces­sor mar­ket and its aggres­si­ve busi­ness prac­ti­ces may limit AMD’s abili­ty to com­pe­te effec­tively; AMD has a wafer sup­p­ly agree­ment with GLOBALFOUNDRIES Inc. (GF) with obli­ga­ti­ons to purcha­se all of its micro­pro­ces­sor and APU pro­duct requi­re­ments, and a cer­tain por­ti­on of its GPU pro­duct requi­re­ments, manu­fac­tu­red at pro­cess nodes lar­ger than 7 nano­me­ter from GF with limi­t­ed excep­ti­ons. If GF is not able to satis­fy AMD’s manu­fac­tu­ring requi­re­ments, AMD’s busi­ness could be adver­se­ly impac­ted; AMD reli­es on third par­ties to manu­fac­tu­re its pro­ducts, and if they are unable to do so on a time­ly basis in suf­fi­ci­ent quan­ti­ties and using com­pe­ti­ti­ve tech­no­lo­gies, AMD’s busi­ness could be mate­ri­al­ly adver­se­ly affec­ted; fail­ure to achie­ve expec­ted manu­fac­tu­ring yields for AMD’s pro­ducts could nega­tively impact its finan­cial results; the suc­cess of AMD’s busi­ness is depen­dent upon its abili­ty to intro­du­ce pro­ducts on a time­ly basis with fea­tures and per­for­mance levels that pro­vi­de value to its cus­to­mers while sup­port­ing and coin­ci­ding with signi­fi­cant indus­try tran­si­ti­ons; if AMD can­not gene­ra­te suf­fi­ci­ent reve­nue and ope­ra­ting cash flow or obtain exter­nal finan­cing, it may face a cash short­fall and be unable to make all of its plan­ned invest­ments in rese­arch and deve­lo­p­ment or other stra­te­gic invest­ments; the loss of a signi­fi­cant cus­to­mer may have a mate­ri­al adver­se effect on AMD; AMD’s receipt of reve­nue from its semi-cus­tom SoC pro­ducts is depen­dent upon its tech­no­lo­gy being desi­gned into third-par­ty pro­ducts and the suc­cess of tho­se pro­ducts; glo­bal eco­no­mic and mar­ket uncer­tain­ty may adver­se­ly impact AMD’s busi­ness and ope­ra­ting results; AMD’s pro­ducts may be sub­ject to secu­ri­ty vul­nerabi­li­ties that could have a mate­ri­al adver­se effect on AMD; IT outa­ges, data loss, data brea­ches and cyber-attacks could com­pro­mi­se AMD’s intellec­tu­al pro­per­ty or other sen­si­ti­ve infor­ma­ti­on, be cos­t­ly to reme­dia­te and cau­se signi­fi­cant dama­ge to its busi­ness, repu­ta­ti­on and ope­ra­ti­ons; AMD’s ope­ra­ting results are sub­ject to quar­ter­ly and sea­so­nal sales pat­terns; AMD may not be able to gene­ra­te suf­fi­ci­ent cash to ser­vice its debt obli­ga­ti­ons or meet its working capi­tal requi­re­ments; AMD has a lar­ge amount of indeb­ted­ness which could adver­se­ly affect its finan­cial posi­ti­on and pre­vent it from imple­men­ting its stra­tegy or ful­fil­ling its con­trac­tu­al obli­ga­ti­ons; the agree­ments gover­ning AMD’s notes and the Secu­red Revol­ving Line of Cre­dit impo­se rest­ric­tions on AMD that may adver­se­ly affect AMD’s abili­ty to ope­ra­te its busi­ness; the mar­kets in which AMD’s pro­ducts are sold are high­ly com­pe­ti­ti­ve; AMD’s world­wi­de ope­ra­ti­ons are sub­ject to poli­ti­cal, legal and eco­no­mic risks and natu­ral dis­as­ters, which could have a mate­ri­al adver­se effect on it; the con­ver­si­on of the 2.125% Con­ver­ti­ble Seni­or Notes due 2026 may dilute the owner­ship inte­rest of AMD’s exis­ting stock­hol­ders, or may other­wi­se depress the pri­ce of its com­mon stock; uncer­tain­ties invol­ving the orde­ring and ship­ment of AMD’s pro­ducts could mate­ri­al­ly adver­se­ly affect it; the demand for AMD’s pro­ducts depends in part on the mar­ket con­di­ti­ons in the indus­tries into which they are sold. Fluc­tua­tions in demand for AMD’s pro­ducts or a mar­ket decli­ne in any of the­se indus­tries could have a mate­ri­al adver­se effect on its results of ope­ra­ti­ons; AMD’s abili­ty to design and intro­du­ce new pro­ducts in a time­ly man­ner is depen­dent upon third-par­ty intellec­tu­al pro­per­ty; AMD depends on third-par­ty com­pa­nies for the design, manu­fac­tu­re and sup­p­ly of mother­boards, soft­ware and other com­pu­ter plat­form com­pon­ents to sup­port its busi­ness; if AMD loses Micro­soft Corporation’s sup­port for its pro­ducts or other soft­ware ven­dors do not design and deve­lop soft­ware to run on AMD’s pro­ducts, its abili­ty to sell its pro­ducts could be mate­ri­al­ly adver­se­ly affec­ted; and AMD’s reli­ance on third-par­ty dis­tri­bu­tors and add-in-board part­ners sub­jects it to cer­tain risks. Inves­tors are urged to review in detail the risks and uncer­tain­ties in AMD’s Secu­ri­ties and Exch­an­ge Com­mis­si­on filings, inclu­ding but not limi­t­ed to AMD’s Quar­ter­ly Report on Form 10‑Q for the quar­ter ended June 29, 2019.

 

FOOTNOTES
  1. Based on AMD ana­ly­sis, August 2019. Busi­ness desk­top pro­ces­sor is defi­ned as a pro­ces­sor desi­gned for desk­top PCs which includes full, inte­gra­ted mana­gea­bi­li­ty and secu­ri­ty fea­tures. [RP3‑1]
  2. Test­ing as of 08/08/2019 by AMD Per­for­mance Labs using the Cine­bench R20 nT bench­mark test. Results may vary. RP3‑4
  3. Test­ing as of 09/20/2019 by AMD Per­for­mance Labs using the SPEC­work­sta­tion™ 3.0.1 bench­mark. Scores are esti­ma­tes based on AMD inter­nal lab measurements/modeling and may vary. Sys­tem Con­fi­gu­ra­ti­ons: AMD Ryzen™ 7 PRO 3700, 1x8GB DDR4 2667MHz, RX550 4GB GPU (dri­ver 26.20.13001.16003), Sam­sung 970 PRO 512GB, Win­dows 10 x64 v1903 | Intel Core i7-9700, 1x8GB DDR4 2667MHz, RX550 4GB GPU (dri­ver 26.20.13001.16003), Sam­sung 970 PRO 512GB, Win­dows 10 x64 v1903 | Test Results: Esti­ma­ted SPEC­work­sta­tion™ 3.0.1 Finan­cial Ser­vices Com­po­si­te Score: Core i7-9700: 1.29 | Ryzen™ 7 PRO 3700: 2.92 | Esti­ma­ted SPEC­work­sta­tion™ 3.0.1 Life Sci­en­ces Com­po­si­te Score: Core i7-9700: 1.21 | Ryzen™ 7 PRO 3700: 1.49 | Esti­ma­ted SPEC­work­sta­tion™ 3.0.1 Ener­gy Com­po­si­te Score: Core i7-9700: 0.81 | Ryzen™ 7 PRO 3700: 1.04 SPEC® and bench­mark SPEC­work­sta­tion™ are regis­tered trade­marks of Stan­dard Per­for­mance Eva­lua­ti­on Cor­po­ra­ti­on.  Addi­tio­nal infor­ma­ti­on about the SPEC® bench­marks can be found at www.spec.org/gwpg.  Results may vary. RP3‑7
  4. On Ryzen 9 PRO 3900, Ryzen 7 PRO 3700 and Ryzen 5 PRO 3600 Processors
  5. For gene­ral busi­ness lap­tops and desk­tops, the AMD Memo­ry Guard fea­ture is included in AMD PRO pro­ces­sors. PP‑3
  6. Based on busi­ness class desk­tops with AMD Pro pro­ces­sors, Win­dows Pro, up to 11 USB ports, TPM with two M.2 slots for sto­rage as of Sep­tem­ber 2019.
  7. Based on busi­ness class USFF desk­tops having less than 2 liters in volu­me, with 9th Gen Intel pro­ces­sors or AMD Pro pro­ces­sors, inte­gra­ted VESA mount and VGA, 6 USB Ports, Win­dows 10 Pro, and TPM. Smal­lest based on volu­me, most powerful based on pro­ces­sor, gra­phics, memo­ry as of Sep­tem­ber 2019. The­se state­ments have not been inde­pendent­ly veri­fied by AMD
  8. HP Mini-in-One 24 Dis­play sold sepa­ra­te­ly. PC must be con­fi­gu­red with optio­nal USB‑C™ with 100W Power Deli­very card.
  9. Though both are often mea­su­red in watts, it is important to distin­gu­ish bet­ween ther­mal and elec­tri­cal watts. Ther­mal wat­ta­ge for pro­ces­sors is con­vey­ed via ther­mal design power (TDP). TDP is a cal­cu­la­ted value that con­veys an appro­pria­te ther­mal solu­ti­on to achie­ve the inten­ded ope­ra­ti­on of a pro­ces­sor. Elec­tri­cal watts are not a varia­ble in the TDP cal­cu­la­ti­on. By design, elec­tri­cal watts can vary from workload to workload and may exceed ther­mal watts. GD-109
  10. Max boost for AMD Ryzen PRO Pro­ces­sors is the maxi­mum fre­quen­cy achie­va­ble by a sin­gle core on the pro­ces­sor run­ning a burs­ty sin­gle-threa­ded workload. Max boost will vary based on seve­ral fac­tors, inclu­ding, but not limi­t­ed to: ther­mal pas­te; sys­tem coo­ling; mother­board design and BIOS; the latest AMD chip­set dri­ver; and the latest OS updates.