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Here’s how to watch AMD reveal its new Ryzen chips at Computex

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Ahead of the Computex PC electronics conference, AMD will hold its keynote to announce its highly anticipated Ryzen 3000 series processor. AMD is leading off the conference with its keynote, which will be presented by the company’s CEO, Dr. Lisa Su.

Here’s everything you need to know about how to watch it and what to expect.

How to watch

The presentation will be held the morning before Computex officially kicks off, at 10 a.m. Monday, May 27, in Taipei. Fortunately, you don’t have to be in Taiwan to watch as the entire presentation will be livestreamed.

Here in the states, the keynote will start at 7 p.m. PT on Sunday, May 26, or 10 p.m. ET.

To receive an email notification for the stream, you can sign up on AMD’s website. Once a streaming link is available, we will embed a player in this article for your viewing pleasure.

What to expect

First and foremost, we are expecting AMD to fully unveil the company’s 3rd generation Ryzen CPUs, and their accompanying Radeon Navi graphics cards, which they teased at CES 2019. While the benchmarks debuted at CES 2019 suggest that it will be a formidable contender with Intel’s powerhouse processors, the exact specs for the Ryzen 3000 series are hard to pin down.

The first reliable glimpse of what Ryzen 3000 line will look like, and what kind of base specs it will offer, came shortly after AMD’s tease of the chip at CES 2019. At that point, the preview Ryzen 3000 model the company showed off, built according to their Zen 2 architecture and with 7nm manufacturing, demonstrated performance that was on par with Intel’s Core i9-9900K but with 30 percent less power consumption, and sporting PCIe 4.0 connectivity.

However, new leaks this week from Wccftech shed more light on the specs to expect from the 3rd generation desktop Ryzen line. So far, the 3000 series will feature at least two models, one with 12 cores and a lightning-fast 5.0 GHz clock speed without overclocking, and the other with 16 cores and 4.2 GHz.

A subsequent leak published by Wccftech also reveals some details on the new Radeon Navi GPUs that will eventually release with the Ryzen 3000 CPUs: The flagship Radeon Navi RX 3080 will bump the previous generation’s four shader engines to eight shader engines, each with 5 compute units.

Beyond these recently reported details, consumers have a lot less to go off of as to how the final launch portfolio for this year’s AMD CPUs will look. In March, speculations pointed to a 3rd generation lineup of at least five different models across a range of price points (from around $200 to almost $600) to offer more tiers, and thus more choice, to consumers than their 2nd generation predecessors. We also learned that the new CPUs would still conform to AMD’s favored AM4 socket, maintaining continuity and modularity with the 2000 series, and with the prospective 4000 series which the company has promised to build with AM4 sockets. Finally, rumors circulated about an ultra-high-end Threadripper line within the 3000 series due to be announced later in the year, after the base 3000 models hit the market.

A lot has changed on this front since March. To start the Threadripper variants of the Ryzen 3000 line initially slated for late 2019 appears to be in serious doubt, though its fate remains to be seen. It is also likely that the 3rd generation will include a wide array of options, with a Ryzen 3, Ryzen 5 and Ryzen 7, packing six, eight, and twelve cores, respectively.

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