AMD Kaveri APU Arriving For Desktop PCs in Q4 2013 – Kaveri Graphics Demonstrated With New Virtual Reality Tech
AMD has officially confirmed that their
fourth generation Kaveri APU would be headed to desktop PCs in 2013. It was previously
reported that Kaveri APUs might have been postponed till 2014 however the desktop APUs arrive officially in 2013.
AMD Kaveri APU Arriving For Desktop PCs in Q4 2013
AMD recently had a press conference where they detailed their
next generation Steamroller,
Jaguar + and ARM based embedded devices. Aside from the embedded products, AMD did a small Q/A session with tech journalists where Computerbase got to ask some
questions regarding any possible delays for the Kaveri APU platform. AMD replied that Kaveri APU is headed to desktop PCs in 2013 while
notebooks
based on the Kaveri APU would launch around spring 2014. The Kaveri
mobility APUs would be showcased during the CES 2014 event in January
but the actual products would launch in late Q1 2014 or early Q2 2014.
So this much is settled that PC enthusiasts would finally get to meet
the Kaveri APU in this year bringing the new x86 Steamroller cores, GCN
(Volcanic Islands) integrated graphics processors and full support of
HSA features. It would be compatible with the new
FM2+ socketed boards which would start arriving in the markets shortly and we have already got to see a few lineups from
ASRock, Gigabyte and
ASUS. Rest assured, more motherboards would be unveiled prior to Kaveri’s launch.
Aside from the press conference, AMD also brought along with them a
desktop PC which was running a Kaveri APU. No specifications or details
were mentioned but Computerbase did
mention that they were able to demo a game using a new kind of Virtual
Reality set that felt similar to the Oculus Rift virtual reality
headset. The press was able to only use the virtual reality set and AMD
didn’t even attach a keyboard to the PC possibly due to fear of some
journalists sneaking into the technical specs and details of the PC.
Nevertheless, if AMD is making use of their own Virtual Reality tech and
if Kaveri APU alone is possible to run this tech, then that really
sounds amazing and definitely something to look forward to. It is also
said that the PC was using a large ATX sized development board and the
cooling system was the common AMD box cooler which we have seen shipped
along with AMD’s FX processors and A-Series APUs.
This article originally appeared on WCCFTech (Link)
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