Testseek.com have collected 76 expert reviews of the AMD A8-7600 65W 3.3GHz Socket FM2+ and the average rating is 76%. Scroll down and see all reviews for AMD A8-7600 65W 3.3GHz Socket FM2+.
February 2014
(76%)
76 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Subjective impressions and conclusions As I said on the previous page, Battlefield 4's Mantle renderer is kind of a double-edged sword. That's true on Kaveri much as it is on the high-end, R9 290X-powerd system that Scott tested. The renderer's effect, in...
As the benchmarks have shown, AMD are still way off when it comes to CPU specific tasks. However, Kaveri was never really meant to compete with Intel's i5 or i7 processors and was aimed more at the casual gamer. In terms of gaming performance, Kaveri sho...
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(78%)
Published: 2014-01-23, Author: Steven , review by: techspot.com
Kaveri's efficiency gains make it a wise choice over Richland while AMD's powerful integrated graphics and affordable pricing are enough to counter Intel's faster CPUs.
Relatively weak speed gains overall with a 10% clockforclock performance bump over Richland, while the older part actually came out on top more than we expected.
Published: 2014-01-21, Author: Joel , review by: pcmag.com
Best-in-class GPU performance. Much-improved CPU performance. Future support for HSA applications and the Mantle graphics API should further improve performance.
Performance still lags far behind that of Intel chips
The new AMD A8-7600 offers best-in-class GPU performance and much-improved CPU performance in the 45W power envelope. Future support for HSA applications and the Mantle graphics API should further improve the chip's performance....
Published: 2014-01-16, Author: Chris , review by: tomshardware.com
Abstract: We've spent the days following CES benchmarking two of AMD's new Kaveri-based APUs. Do the Steamroller x86 architecture, GCN graphics design, and HSA-oriented features impress, or do they come up short against Intel's value-oriented Haswell-based parts? ...
AMD's new Kaveri APU is an impressive feat of engineering, coming in as the very first truly HSA-compatible processor. There are a lot of changes for AMD with this release including a new processor core, a new memory hierarchy, as well as a new process t...
Published: 2014-01-14, Author: Ian , review by: anandtech.com
In a vacuum where all that's available are other AMD parts, Kaveri and its Steamroller cores actually look pretty good. At identical frequencies there's a healthy increase in IPC, and AMD has worked very hard to move its Bulldozer family down to a substan...
AMD's Kaveri APU raises the bar for integrated graphics performance, which is sort of what we expected. What did you think would happen when AMD built a processor infused with GCN-class Radeon hardware? To be honest, I didn't expect something that plays ...
Alright lets wrap things up. I profoundly like the new Kaveri architecture, it is the first true native heterogeneous APU architecture that will set the path into the future. With it's well over 2 Billion transistors it isn't even a cheap chip to produce...
Great Graphics Performance, Improved Power Efficiency, Small CPU Performance Improvements, GCN and TrueAudio In An APU
Four AMD Cores Not Always As Fast As Two Intel Cores, A8-7600 Not Yet Available, New Socket
With that said, the A8-7600 is a decent performer overall. Its Steamroller-based CPU cores do not do much to make up ground versus Intel's processors, so in the more CPU-bound workloads, Intel's dual-core Core i3-4330 is competes favorably to AMD's quad-c...