Things and stuff and things.
An online listing leaked from a store hints at a release date
Published on July 8, 2020 By Tatiora In Personal Computing

Have you been waiting for AMD’s Ryzen 4000 desktop APUs? Well, your wait could be over in as early as just a few days, according to one retailer.

Reports started over the holiday weekend stating that Dutch retailer Centralpoint listed the incoming Ryzen 7 Pro 4750G, Ryzen 5 Pro 4650G, and Ryzen 3 Pro 4350G on their website. The listings say that the higher-end octa-core and hex-core CPUs will ship within "3 to 5 days", with the entry-level quad-core APU expected to arrive in stock on July 10.

Although there have been plenty of other leaks, Centralpoint is the first place to give an idea of pricing. The AMD Ryzen 7 Pro 4750G will fetch $357 USD, while the Ryzen 5 Pro 4650G is $243 USD and the Ryzen 3 Pro 4350G is $177 USD. AMD itself hasn't given any official word on pricing yet, so these prices could be little more than placeholders.

The specifications detailed on Centralpoint's product pages seem to support some previous leaks reported by Tom's Hardware back in May.

We talked a little bit about what AMD's plans for 2020 were back in January when they debuted several new products at CES.

Are you thinking about upgrading or building a PC soon? What's your hardware plan - does AMD fit into it?

 


Comments
on Jul 08, 2020

I’ve been thinking on building a new computer and I’m still in that Intel area. AMD just recently put out their XT versions of chips. It seems that AMD is flooding the market with new chips, but it seems they’re having a hard time keeping up with their bios updates. 

on Jul 09, 2020

I have been waiting for AMD’s Ryzen 4000 desktop APUs, can't wait to benchmark its performance.

on Jul 09, 2020


Are you thinking about upgrading or building a PC soon? What's your hardware plan - does AMD fit into it?

I recently built an AMD Ryzen Threadripper 2920X and it will be the last complete build I do.  My hands are not up for it anymore and I'm not enjoying the process like I used to.  Nope, I'm going to leave it up to the techies to sort out matters of hardware so I can just sit back and not have to deal with painful and often frustrating times doing it myself.

Besides, the motherboard in the Threadripper build died and I'm awaiting its replacement so the techie can put it all back together again.  The first one MSI sent me was used and damaged.... not only that it wouldn't post so back it went.