The AMD Ryzen 5 Pro 215 is designed for both laptop and desktop platforms, built on a 4nm semiconductor process with a 28W thermal design power rating, keeping it suited for thermally constrained environments while maintaining a maximum operating temperature of 100°C. It includes integrated graphics, supports 64-bit computing, and features PCIe 4.0 connectivity for modern peripheral and storage interfaces.
The processor operates across six cores running at 3.2 GHz, utilizing big.LITTLE technology to manage workload distribution, and delivers 12 threads in total alongside a clock multiplier of 32. Cache is arranged as 6MB of L2 and 16MB of L3, providing reasonable data proximity for sustained tasks, though the multiplier is locked, meaning clock speeds cannot be manually adjusted beyond factory settings.
In PassMark testing, the processor achieves a multi-threaded score of 17,894, reflecting its overall throughput across all cores and threads, while the single-core result of 3,645 indicates the per-core processing capability for tasks that rely on individual thread performance.
The integrated Radeon 740M graphics core runs at a base clock of 800 MHz, boosting up to 2,700 MHz under load, and supports up to four displays simultaneously. Its rendering hardware consists of 256 shading units, 16 texture mapping units, and 8 render output units, with API support covering DirectX 12, OpenGL 4.6, and OpenCL 2.1 for a broad range of graphics and compute workloads.
The processor supports DDR5 memory across a dual-channel configuration, with a maximum rated speed of 7,500 MHz and a ceiling of 256GB total installed memory. It also includes ECC memory support, making it capable of handling error-correcting RAM for workloads where data integrity is a requirement.
The processor supports multithreading and includes the NX bit for hardware-level execution protection. Its instruction set support spans MMX, F16C, FMA3, AES, SSE 4.1, SSE 4.2, AVX, and AVX2, covering a wide range of vector, floating-point, and cryptographic operations across compatible software workloads.