AMD skips Chromebooks, bets on Windows 10

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in hardware on (#AGTA)
story imageChromebooks may be hot-ticket items, but with its sixth-generation A-series chips for mainstream laptops, AMD is instead placing its bets on Microsoft's Windows 10. The new chips, code-named Carrizo, will appear in laptops priced between US$400 and $800 from Asus, Acer, Lenovo, Hewlett-Packard and Toshiba. The first wave of laptops will become available starting in July, initially with Windows 8, and later in the year with Windows 10.

The new chips include quad-core A8 and A10 processors, which have up to six GPU cores, and the faster FX chips, which have up to eight GPU cores. The chips draw between 15 watts to 35 watts of power. Some new laptops based on the chips were shown at the Computex trade show in Taipei this week. PC makers are considering the new Carrizo chips for Windows laptops, not for Chromebooks, said Adam Kozak, marketing manager at AMD. Laptops also will get thinner and lighter, as Carrizo chips are about 29 percent smaller than their predecessors.

Re: Logic (Score: 0)

by Anonymous Coward on 2015-06-08 11:37 (#ANGJ)

I just built a test machine with updates enabled. It borked itself on the first two machines. Twice. Two screwups from a base install. Only on the third go did it actually work correctly. Microsoft updates are a nightmare. I have been nutted by updates in the past on Windows 7 and XP. Forced updates? Can anyone else hear millions of people scream as they watch their pc crash? I hope everyone in the world can handle a few hundred MB when the net is turned on.
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