Tag

Ryzen Ai Max

All articles tagged with #ryzen ai max

AMD Unveils Agent Computers to Run AI Locally, Not Just in the Cloud
technology28 days ago

AMD Unveils Agent Computers to Run AI Locally, Not Just in the Cloud

AMD pitches a new product category called “Agent Computers” for locally running AI agents on powerful desktops/mini PCs powered by Ryzen AI Max+ (e.g., 395) and up to 128GB RAM, arguing private, always-on AI work can live on consumer/SME hardware. The company cites OpenClaw and showcases HP Z2 Mini G1a, Corsair AI Workstation 300, and Framework Desktop as examples, aiming to compete with Nvidia’s DGX Spark/Station. The concept emphasizes privacy and on-device AI workloads that don’t need hyperscale data centers, with models up to 200B parameters possible given high memory support.

Lenovo Rolls Out AI-Driven Creator Devices and Foldable Concepts at MWC 2026
technology1 month ago

Lenovo Rolls Out AI-Driven Creator Devices and Foldable Concepts at MWC 2026

Lenovo used MWC 2026 to unveil a broad AI-enabled consumer lineup for creators, gamers, and mobile productivity, including the Yoga 9i 2‑in‑1 Aura Edition, Yoga Pro 7a, IdeaPad Slim 5i Ultra, Idea Tab Pro Gen 2 (first tablet to feature Lenovo Qira), and Legion 7a, all powered by AMD Ryzen AI Max+ and new Copilot+ AI features; it also previewed the Yoga Book Pro 3D Concept (glasses-free 3D) and the Legion Go Fold Concept (foldable handheld with multiple modes). Lenovo also announced the rollout of Lenovo Qira across 20+ devices and shared European pricing/availability windows for several launches in 2026.

AMD Bets Ryzen AI MAX and 400/300 to Undercut Panther Lake Across Segments
technology2 months ago

AMD Bets Ryzen AI MAX and 400/300 to Undercut Panther Lake Across Segments

AMD frames its Ryzen AI MAX as the premier halo platform that it says will outperform Intel’s Panther Lake Core Ultra Series 3 in high-end tasks, while Ryzen AI 400/300 are pitched as leaders in mainstream and entry-level laptops thanks to stronger iGPUs and more threads. The company also disputes some CES-era Intel claims on graphics, power efficiency, and scaling, noting that only reviews in the coming days will reveal the true competitive standings across content creation, gaming, and AI workloads.