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However, with the next-generation Ryzen 10000 series, AMD seems to be reallocating the silicon area for different purposes, as the role of integrated GPUs in desktop systems diminishes. Most PC builders pair a dedicated GPU with their DIY or OEM PC builds, using integrated graphics mainly for debugging when the discrete GPU encounters issues. Since the silicon space in the CPU can be repurposed, AMD might switch to an NPU to enhance local AI capabilities and offload some AI tasks from the GPU to the CPU's integrated NPU. This could mean the platform might become Copilot+ AI PC certified if the NPU achieves over 40 TOPS of compute power.
We already know that the 900-series chipset accompanying the "Olympic Ridge" CPU family is essentially the same "Promontory 21," but the platform change is occurring within the newly redesigned client I/O die. This new cIOD supports native CUDIMMs and CAMMs. Additionally, AMD is preparing the new EXPO 1.2 standard for overclocking DDR5 memory modules. With these upgraded memory controllers and native support for CUDIMMs backed by EXPO 1.2, AMD aims to catch up with Intel in terms of DDR5 memory speeds.
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