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That said, there’s still plenty here that’s NZXT too such as support for its CAM software to control the board’s lighting and ...
AMD’s Ryzen 200 series is essentially a rebranding of its Ryzen 7040 and 8040 series, marking it as the third lineup based on the Zen 4 architecture. These processors share the same 4nm lithography ...
Radeon R9 Fury X specs The Fiji processor in the R9 Fury X is based on AMD's third generation GCN architecture, previously found in the R9 295/380, and codenamed Tonga.
That means they will no longer get supported in new driver releases. Generally speaking, it's everything from Radeon HD 7000 series, R200 series, R300 series, and R9 Fury series cards.
WCCFTECH claims AMD has reached tape out for an upcoming Radeon 400 series of graphics cards, which could be the true successor to the R9 200-series after the rebranded 3xx cards.
The tables turn when you hit the $200 mark. First revealed at E3, the Radeon R9 380’s “Tonga” graphics processor is the same one found in the R9 285, which first launched in August 2014.
Through the Radeon Fury series, it appears that AMD is set to target the high-end gaming segment, where gamers are increasingly looking for 4K games and virtual reality titles.
AMD's new Radeon R9 300 Series of high-end desktop graphics cards is notably more streamlined than the previous generation. The R9 200 Series featured six GPUs - the R9 295X2, R9 290X, R9 290, R9 ...
When AMD released the 300 series graphics cards, it produced a new driver - 15.15 - which doesn't function out of the box on 200 series cards. Owners of existing Radeons have a new 15.6 beta ...
This article is more than 9 years old. I recently spent some quality time at PC World with Frame Rate Target Control (FRTC), a new feature for AMD's Radeon 300 series and Fury line of video cards.