AMD's next-gen Ryzen 9000 desktop chips and the Zen 5 architecture arrive in July
Briefly

The Ryzen 9000 series and Zen 5 architecture provide incremental improvements over previous generations, with Zen 5 being approximately 16 percent faster than Zen 4 at equivalent clock speeds, though lacking the significant leap seen between Zen 3 and Zen 4.
Ryzen 9000 CPUs continue with the same core count as previous lineups, featuring 6 to 16 full-size Zen 5 cores, utilizing two or three chiplets with one or two CPU chiplets and a separate I/O die for connectivity.
AMD introduces Zen 5c E-cores optimized for reduced die space over higher clock speeds in the Ryzen AI 300-series laptop chips, enhancing multi-core performance to match Intel, while maintaining better power consumption.
Ryzen 9000 does not incorporate Neural Processing Units (NPUs) and lacks any mention of RDNA 2-based integrated GPUs found in Ryzen 7000, suggesting a possible omission from this CPU generation.
Read at Ars Technica
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