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AMD Formally Launches Ryzen Threadripper PRO 9000 and Radeon AI PRO 9000 Series

btarunr

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AMD today formally launched a slew of new hardware for workstations. These include the new Ryzen Threadripper PRO 9000 "Shimada Peak" line of high core-count processors, and the Radeon AI PRO 9000 line of graphics cards that cover a range of use-cases spanning from edge AI acceleration to professional visualization. The Threadripper 9000 series is based on the "Zen 5" microarchitecture, and "Shimada Peak" is a variant of the "Turin" MCM powering 5th Gen EPYC processors, which comes with workstation-relevant I/O. Meanwhile, the Radeon AI Pro 9000 series is based on the same RDNA 4 graphics architecture powering the Radeon RX 9000 series gaming graphics cards.

The Ryzen Threadripper 9000 series comes with CPU core counts of up to 96-core/192-thread, with an IPC uplift from the "Zen 5" microarchitecture over the previous Threadripper 7000 series "Storm Peak" processors powered by "Zen 4." More than IPC, workstation users should benefit greatly from the architecture's full 512-bit FPU data-path, offering significant increases in performance of applications that leverage the AVX-512 instruction set. AMD also fine-tuned the IOD (I/O die) to support increased memory speeds of DDR5-6400 (native), AMD EXPO profiles, and CKD. With these changes, and minor increases in clock speeds for certain SKUs, AMD is promising a 16% uplift in performance over the Threadripper 7000 series predecessors in workstation benchmarks, and a significant 25% increase in SPEC Workstation AI and ML benchmarks (comparing identical core-counts and frequency).





The Ryzen Threadripper 9000 series "Shimada Peak" package is designed for AMD Socket TR5, and is drop-in compatible with all TR5 motherboards with the latest UEFI firmware updates. AMD mandates USB BIOS Flashback feature for all its workstation and server platforms. The processor comes with an 8-channel DDR5 memory interface (16 sub-channels), with ECC DDR5-6400 native speeds, support for AMD EXPO tested for over 7000 MT/s, and memory interleaving for 2-, 4-, 6-, or 8-channel. The memory interface also supports RDIMMs, although the platform is capped at 1 DIMM per channel, and a maximum memory size of 2 TB.



The SoC I/O features sees a massive 128-lane PCI-Express 5.0 root complex, which lacks the CXL features you find in EPYC "Turin" processors. SoC topology changes sees the PCIe aggregate bandwidth improve over "Storm Peak." Other features include AMD PRO Management features, and AIM-T WLAN support.



The following above shows the various processor model numbers in the Threadripper PRO 9000 WX series, which range from 12-core/24-thread, all the way up to 96-core/192-thread. All SKUs have a common I/O feature-set, and 350 W TDP.

AMD also unveiled its smaller lineup of Threadripper 9000X HEDT processor series. These are targeted at HEDTs and entry-level workstations. The key difference with the PRO 9000 WX series is the lack of AMD PRO features, and a truncated I/O feature-set that includes 4-channel (8 sub-channel) DDR5 memory, and a reduced 48-lane PCI-Express 5.0 root complex. There are only three SKUs, ranging from 24-core/48-thread, to 64-core/128-thread. These chips are compatible with Socket TR5 motherboards, too, however, half the memory channels and some PCIe/NVMe slots will be disabled or reconfigured—the motherboard manual will tell you which ones.



Moving on, and we see the introduction of the Radeon AI PRO 9000 series. These are graphics cards meant for a professional environment that can either be professional-visualization, or workstations with up to four of these installed. The card comes with a maxed-out 4 nm "Navi 48" GPU, with 64 RDNA 4 compute units for 4,096 stream processors, and 128 AI accelerators, capable of accelerated matrix operations across many data formats. A significant upgrade over the RX 9070 XT gaming GPU is the memory size, which has been doubled to 32 GB. The memory sub-system is 20 Gbps GDDR6 across a 256-bit wide memory interface for 640 GB/s of memory bandwidth, which is cushioned by a 64 MB 3rd Gen Infinity Cache.



All said and done, the AMD Radeon AI PRO R9700 offers up to 191 TFLOPS FP16 dense, and up to 1531 TOPS INT4 sparse, within a board power footprint of up to 300 W. This slide highlights its differences with the previous generation Radeon PRO W7800 that's based on the "Navi 31" silicon and RDNA 3 architecture.

The Ryzen Threadripper 9000X series processors will be available in the retail market, the Ryzen Threadripper PRO 9000 WX series will be available through server and workstation OEMs. The Radeon AI PRO 9000 series graphics cards will be sold through AMD's Radeon RX board partners.

The complete AMD slide deck follows.

Main Deck:


ISV Deck:


ROCm Deck:


Ecosystem Deck:


View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
It looks like the used too much AI in their marketing slides.
That formatting and text spacing is terrible :fear:
 
So are they a drop-in to existing ZEN4 threadripper machines like a ThinkStation P8 ?

Also, wtf is wrong with the text in these slides ?
 
It looks like the used too much AI in their marketing slides.
That formatting and text spacing is terrible :fear:
Nope, the AI used to much marketing babble in IT'S slides, hahahahahaha :D
 
Woah what happened to the slides?! If the presentation was generated by AI like others suggested then it's getting even darker for humanity. The whole presentation is almost unreadable.
 
Woah what happened to the slides?! If the presentation was generated by AI like others suggested then it's getting even darker for humanity. The whole presentation is almost unreadable.
Presentation itself is most likely fine since it's properly rendered to images on other sites like Phoronix. Whatever method was used to convert it to .jpg while adding TPU's logo is at fault here.
 
Presentation itself is most likely fine since it's properly rendered to images on other sites like Phoronix. Whatever method was used to convert it to .jpg while adding TPU's logo is at fault here.
Okay thanks for the clarification! I think everyone blames AI when anything goes wrong nowadays.

Edit: Actually, the slides at Phoronix are using a different fonts for some of the headers and subheaders. Almost like they remade the presentation. Maybe AMD sent out the raw PPT file and different software is converting the slides to JPG or other graphics format in different ways.
 
Presentation itself is most likely fine since it's properly rendered to images on other sites like Phoronix. Whatever method was used to convert it to .jpg while adding TPU's logo is at fault here.

Very interesting .. the slides show fine in Acrobat but look terrible in Photoshop when converting them to JPG. I've converted hundreds of decks like this, maybe it's due to the new font that AMD is using. Will research alternatives to convert to JPG at high quality

Edit: works fine when going Acrobat -> save as image -> Photoshop -> add watermark

uploading new images
 
Last edited:
there is a big problem with missing onts its unreadable!
 
Ah, the irony of Adobe not getting the formatting converted properly.
 
Looks like AMD didn't share the pricing for the TR parts.

Here's to hoping Intel can make a comeback in the HEDT space although it seems unlikely given their situation.
 
Very interesting .. the slides show fine in Acrobat but look terrible in Photoshop when converting them to JPG. I've converted hundreds of decks like this, maybe it's due to the new font that AMD is using. Will research alternatives to convert to JPG at high quality

Edit: works fine when going Acrobat -> save as image -> Photoshop -> add watermark

uploading new images
This happened in the past also with a 9060xt post.

 
I'm hoping the 9000x series will drive down the prices on 7000x series on the used market.
 
Looks like AMD didn't share the pricing for the TR parts.

Here's to hoping Intel can make a comeback in the HEDT space although it seems unlikely given their situation.
52 core nova lake --- they will probably just push consumer higher tbh - and even at that not for a while.
 
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