On September 27, AMD introduced the Ryzen Embedded V3000 series processors, adding the high-performance Zen 3 core to the V-Series lineup. The Embedded series is designed for 24/7-hour network-primarily networked devices that require high performance combined with energy savings.
The company claims a performance increase of up to 124%, a 50% increase in memory data transfer speed, a twofold increase in the number of processing cores, and improved I/O capabilities compared to the V2000 generation .
The novelty is already being shipped to OEMs of routing, security and storage systems. They offer the following benefits and conditions:
- support for Linux Ubuntu and Yocto OS drivers;
- product availability up to 10 years with full technical support;
- AMD Memory Guard 4 security to protect against unauthorized access to memory;
- AMD Platform Secure Boot 5 to mitigate advanced persistent threats to firmware.
AMD Ryzen Embedded V3000 processors are available in quad-, six-, and eight-core configurations with TDP profiles from 10W to 54W for storage and networking.
Systems-on-a-chip support DDR5 memory, NVMe drives, PCIe 4.0 interface. Supports USB4, USB 3.2 Gen2, USB 2.0, 1Gbps, 2.5Gbps, and 10Gbps networks.
Source: AMD press release