At CES 2026, AMD made waves by introducing its latest server offering, the EPYC Venice, which is built upon the cutting-edge Zen6 architecture. This new product is primarily aimed at the server and AI sectors. The consumer-grade Zen6 processor is anticipated to hit the market next year. Regarding the desktop market, there's only a smattering of information available about the Olympic Range. In contrast, the mobile market's Medusa Point has received more extensive coverage. Earlier, through BND (it could be a specific information source, here I keep it as is for the original meaning) data, it was revealed that the Medusa Point series will come in two TDP (Thermal Design Power) tiers: high and low, with 45W and 28W respectively. The Medusa Point series marks a substantial upgrade for AMD's mobile APU. The flagship Ryzen 9 model in this series boasts up to 22 cores. Among these cores, the classic performance cores are tasked with handling high-performance computing jobs. The high-density cores are tailored for multi-threaded, lightweight tasks. Meanwhile, the low-power cores are optimized for background tasks and scenarios with low computational loads, effectively prolonging battery life. This series leverages TSMC's 3-nanometer process technology and incorporates an integrated graphics card with 8 RDNA 3.5+ compute units. It is projected to make its debut in the second quarter of 2026.
