Tag: amd

  • AMD Unveils Largest Design Center in India

    AMD Unveils Largest Design Center in India

    The campus is part of the company’s $400 million investment in India over the next five years, announced at ‘Semicon India 2023’….reports Asian Lite News

    The unveiling of chip-maker AMD’s largest global design centre in India, that plans to host approximately 3,000 engineers in coming years, is a testament to the confidence global companies have in India, Union IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw said on Tuesday.

    The 500,000-square-foot campus in Bengaluru is focused on the design and development of semiconductor technology including 3D stacking, artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML) and more.

    “India’s semiconductor programme launched under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi lays strong emphasis on supporting the design and talent ecosystem for semiconductors,” he said.

    “AMD setting up its largest design centre in Bengaluru is a testament to the confidence global companies have in India,” the minister said.

    The campus is part of the company’s $400 million investment in India over the next five years, announced at ‘Semicon India 2023’.

    The campus will serve as a centre of excellence for the development of leadership products across high-performance CPUs for the data centre and PCs, data centre and gaming GPUs, and adaptive SoCs and FPGAs for embedded devices.

    “This new design centre will help propel technology and product development across the AMD portfolio, fueling the next generation of high performance, adaptive and AI computing solutions for our customers around the world,” said Mark Papermaster, Executive Vice President and Chief Technology Officer, AMD.

    The space features modern R&D labs spread over 60,000-square-feet and a large demo centre for visitors to experience AMD products and solutions.

    “The India design centre started with a handful of employees in 2004. Today, 25 per cent of AMD’s global workforce is located in India and they support the development of AMD leadership products for data centre, gaming, PC and embedded customers,” said Jaya Jagadish, India Country Head, AMD.

    ALSO READ: AWS Applauds India’s Space Sector Surge

  • AMD aims to push the limits of gaming innovation

    AMD aims to push the limits of gaming innovation

    AMD’s goal is to achieve cross-platform gaming leadership, not just the PC but gaming consoles too, according to officials…reports Asian Lite News

    As mobile and PC gaming explodes globally including in India, chip-makers have a daunting task at hand and according to AMD CEO Lisa Su, the company is building next-generation hardware that will meet the high-end gaming demand.

    The goal, she said, is to push the limits of gaming innovation.

    Towards this goal, graphics chip giant AMD has introduced new graphics cards that are built on the high-performance and energy-efficient RDNA 3 architecture for high-end gaming experience.

    “RDNA 3 enables the first chiplet gaming GPU,” Su told mediapersons here.

    AMD’s goal is to achieve cross-platform gaming leadership, not just the PC but gaming consoles too, according to the company CEO.

    “The breakthrough architecture delivers up to 54 per cent more performance per watt than AMD RDNA 2 architecture, and features the world’s fastest interconnect linking the graphics and memory system chiplets,” she informed.

    AMD Radeon RX 7900 Series graphics cards deliver up to 1.7 times higher 4K gaming performance than the previous flagship graphics cards.

    “That gives us an incredible amount of gaming performance,” Su noted.

    The AMD RDNA 3 architecture’s chiplet design combines 5nm and 6nm process nodes, each optimised for specific jobs.

    “These new graphics cards are designed by gamers for gamers. As we were developing the new cards, we not only incorporated feedback from our customers, but we built in the features and capabilities we wanted to use,” according to Scott Herkelman, senior vice president & general manager, Graphics Business Unit at AMD.

    ALSO READ: ‘Accessibility is essentially a human rights issue’