![]() ![]() If you're counting on doing some video editing or compiling one hell of an Excel spreadsheet, you're going to see firsthand a performance boost with the Ryzen 7 4700U. What this all means is that the AMD Ryzen 7 4700U is an absolute beast when it comes to multi-threaded workloads, especially at this price point. That’s not big enough to be evident in day-to-day workloads, but it does still mean something. Effectively, compared to a Ryzen 7 1-Generation processor at the same clock speed, you will get a straight 15% increase in performance. This decision to 7nm has brought a beefy 15% boost to IPC (instructions per clock) performance. ![]() What this means for most people is lower power consumption and much improved performance at the same time. The AMD Ryzen 7 4700U, like the rest of AMD's Renoir processors, is built on a 7nm manufacturing node – the smallest in a commercially available CPU. Much of that performance advantage will be less noticeable when gaming at higher resolutions, or if you pair the processors with a lesser graphics card. As a result, Intel's commanding presence in the enthusiast space is threatened in a way we haven't seen in over a decade.Īs we've seen, gaming remains an advantage for Intel, so if squeezing out every last frame is all you care about, Intel's processors are a good choice. But, there’s a lot more going on under the hood than just a smaller manufacturing node.ĪMD's Zen 2 series has landed, upping the ante with Intel in its high-stakes game for desktop PC market dominance with a well-rounded lineup of new chips that push mainstream platforms to higher core counts and more raw compute than we've ever seen. Still, though, there’s more than just core counts when it comes to a mainstream processor, as single-core performance needs to be on point, especially if you’re hoping to play the best PC games.ĪMD Ryzen 7 1st Generation, and the Zen 2 architecture itself, is notable because it leads 7nm processors to the mainstream for the first time. The AMD Ryzen 7 4700U marks yet another blast from Team AMD, ramping up the intensity of the AMD vs Intel processor war. Ryzen 7 4700U is also the successor of AMD's last gen Ryzen U processor that was based on the Zen+ and 12nm process and was released in 2019. The Ryzen 7 4700U is based on the Renoir 7nm family and is part of the Ryzen 7 series. With base clock at 2GHz, max speed at 4.1GHz, and a 15W power rating. It was released in 2020 with 8 cores and 8 threads. The Ryzen 7 4700U is one of AMD's high-end-low-power Laptop processors. ![]()
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