What is AMD processor?
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) is a computer processor designed or manufactured by AMD, American semiconductor and technology company. AMD primarily produces central processing units (CPU), which aims to compete against offers from a much larger Opponent of Intel®. The AMD processor can be used with the same software as the Intel® processor, but not the same motherboard. The aim of the new generation of the AMD processor is also to combine the processor and a graphic processor into a single chip. A set of instructions and commands that the software programs handed over to the 8086 CPU has become the standard for PC industry. This set of instructions, known today as a set of X86 instructions, is supported by virtually all computer operating systems and CPUs found in the PC. This means that the AMD processor can be used with the same software as the Intel®, Be, Beproto Both have been designed to compatible with the X86 instructions.
While universityThe X86 processors must support the same basic set of instructions, the physical design of the processor and the distribution of its millions of transistors known as microarchitecture may vary. The AMD processor has once been nothing but Intel®'s cloned version of Intel®, but since 1996 the company has used its own designs. With these new designs, new physical "sockets" came to be used to transfer data between a computer motherboard and CPU. The motherboard socket must match the processor, so the processor from one company cannot be used as a replacement for the processor of another company.
The competition between AMD and Intel® was wild and every society has its own group of hard fans. Until the turn of the century, competitors were mostly produced by most low -cost processors, which lacked the CPU from the market leader. At the end of 1999, the AMD Athlon ™ processor was launched and to surprise many, all Intel® offers at a lower price. Since both companies have traded on the market, SOOver disputes and praise rights on the highest executive chips, but the AMD processor was generally available for less than a comparable Intel® chip.
In mid -2000, AMD made several significant changes in its business practices to remain competitive. The company started all its production operations and instead decided to focus on designing chips. In 2008, AMD ATI, a company that produced graphic processing units (GPUs) for playing and 3D graphics. After the purchase, AMD announced its intention to produce chips that combined the CPU and GPU into one unit, a configuration that AMD calls an accelerated processing unit.