There are a number of directions for ‘professional grade’ processors in the market, varying from embedded to long-life support to server functionality. AMD’s PRO lines of processors are akin to their consumer counterparts, except they run a guaranteed lifecycle of support with ‘image stability’ (guaranteed OS images) and extended OEM warranties. AMD’s PRO line typically covers both embedded systems via the BGA lower parts and commercial/enterprise systems with socketed units. This week AMD is announcing their PRO line using the latest AMD microarchitecture, Bristol Ridge, along with continued support for customer requested features.

If you’ve ever browsed for an OEM system, or in a brick-and-mortar shop, you may have come across a system labeled something along the lines of ‘PRO A8’ using an AMD APU. I recently wrote a small news piece which involved an HP system in my local store with an OEM-only APU. These PRO parts enable an OEM to build a particular system, either as a business-to-business sale or directly to customers, and guarantee a fixed longevity for replacements to that system. This is a requirement for a lot of government and business electronic installations – the ability to replace like-for-like in the event of failure. AMD states that the unit shipments of their PRO processor line for commercial, enterprise and the public sector has risen by 45% since mid-2014, or a 20.4% compound annual growth rate (CAGR).

The processors announced today are direct analogues of the consumer grade processors announced a couple of weeks ago, identical in specifications but with PRO in the name and a direct focus on support structures, management, virtualization, security and performance comparisons.

AMD 7th Generation Bristol Ridge PRO Processors
  Modules/
Threads
L2 Cache CPU Base /
 Turbo (MHz)
GPU SPs GPU Base / 
Turbo (MHz)
TDP
PRO A12-9800 2M / 4T 2 MB 3800 / 4200 512 800 / 1108 65W
PRO A10-9700 2M / 4T 2 MB 3500 / 3800 384 720 / 1029 65W
PRO A8-9600 2M / 4T 2 MB 3100 / 3400 384 655 / 900 65W
PRO A6-9500 1M / 2T 1 MB 3500 / 3800 384 720 / 1029 65W
 
PRO A12-9800E 2M / 4T 2 MB 3100 / 3800 512 655 / 900 35W
PRO A10-9700E 2M / 4T 2 MB 3000 / 3500 384 600 / 847 35W
PRO A6-9500E 1M / 2T 1 MB 3000 / 3400 256 576 / 800 35W

All these processors will support DDR4-2400 as standard, and offer USB 3.1 (10 Gbps) support via the appropriate chipset and Type-C with a re-driver chip to support reversible insertion (this is the same as the consumer platform). These new processors are all socketed parts designed for the AM4 platform for now, with BGA components likely to be declared later down the line.

With the PRO APUs, AMD uses an ARM Cortex-A5 to implement ARM TrustZone, offering software agnostic (compared to Intel which does not) support for hardware-based security. This includes Secure Boot, Content Protection, per-Application security, fTPM 2.0, and support for Microsoft Device Guard, Windows Hello, independent fingerprint security, data protection and Bitlocker, among other things. AMD supports this via the DASH management protocol, which is ultimately CPU agnostic and allows users of other DASH systems to get up to speed.

AMD is positioning the APUs to be comparable to various Intel counterparts.

Performance-wise, for the launch, AMD states that in small form factors at 35W and mid-tier at 65W, performance compared to Intel is within 8% for the CPU, but AMD can offer +50-95% in graphics based or graphics accelerated workloads. In this case, AMD was positioning the PRO A12-9800E against the Core i5-6500T for the CPU comparison, and the PRO A12-9800 against the i5-6500 for the graphics comparison. We’ve asked to get these processors in for testing in order to compare.

The first systems using the new 7th Gen PRO APUs will be a set of HP Elitedesk 705 G3 systems, in Mini, SFF and mini-tower form factors. Due to the way these commercial systems are promoted, pricing and specifications will depend highly on the support contract aligned with the business customers. AMD is keen to point out that other customers will release their Bristol Ridge PRO based systems over the coming months.

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  • dsraa - Tuesday, October 4, 2016 - link

    I thought the same thing too. lol
  • Meteor2 - Tuesday, October 4, 2016 - link

    What was their 'first 64-bit ARM SoC to market', from the second slide?
  • MrSpadge - Tuesday, October 4, 2016 - link

    Probably the A1100, which I think was the first 64 bit ARM SERVER SoC. They might even have announced it shortly before Apple shipped the 1st 64 bit ARM SoC.
  • DanNeely - Tuesday, October 4, 2016 - link

    I'm a little surprised they put the entire product line up. I was under the impression that to simplify production logistics once a product is phased out of mainstream consumer availability they normally only offered a small subset of the full line on an extended availability basis. On that front, I'd've only expected 1 each 65 and 35W SKUs to be included; maybe 4 if they included the ones with the cut down half size CPUs.
  • BrokenCrayons - Tuesday, October 4, 2016 - link

    As the current owner of an Athlon x4 860k, I'd like to point out that I'm glad AMD finally added the Cortex-A5. Now at least SOMETHING inside an AMD chip will deliver competitive single-threaded performance.
  • Ro_Ja - Tuesday, October 4, 2016 - link

    512 SPs
    AMD's the king of onboard GPU solution lol

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