The AMD Ryzen AI 7 350 is designed for use in both laptop and desktop systems, built on a 4nm semiconductor process with a Thermal Design Power of 28W, keeping it suited to power-conscious builds. It includes integrated graphics and fully supports 64-bit computing, while its maximum rated CPU temperature sits at 100°C. Connectivity is handled through PCIe 4.0, enabling compatibility with a broad range of modern expansion hardware.
The Ryzen AI 7 350 features an eight-core design using big.LITTLE technology, pairing two groups of four cores each running at 2GHz base, with all 16 threads available for multithreaded workloads. The chip can reach a turbo clock speed of 5GHz under load, governed by a clock multiplier of 20, though the multiplier itself is locked and cannot be adjusted for overclocking. Cache resources total 8MB of L2 and 16MB of L3, providing a reasonable buffer for data-intensive tasks.
In benchmark testing, the Ryzen AI 7 350 achieves a PassMark multi-threaded score of 34,459 alongside a single-threaded result of 3,878, reflecting its threading and per-core behavior under standardized load. The overclocked PassMark result is recorded at 24,477. On Geekbench 6, the chip registers a multi-core score of 11,247 and a single-core score of 2,467, rounding out its measured performance profile across both test suites.
The integrated graphics solution in the Ryzen AI 7 350 is the Radeon 860M, which runs at a base clock of 400MHz and can boost up to 3000MHz. It is built around 8 execution units housing 512 shading units, 32 texture mapping units, and 8 render output units, and can drive up to four displays simultaneously. API support covers DirectX 12, OpenGL 4.6, and OpenCL 2.1, giving it a reasonably broad compatibility profile for graphics and compute workloads.
The Ryzen AI 7 350 supports DDR5 memory at speeds up to 8000MHz across a dual-channel configuration, providing a solid bandwidth foundation for the platform. Maximum addressable memory reaches 256GB, which gives the chip considerable headroom for memory-intensive use cases. ECC memory is not supported, placing it squarely in the consumer rather than workstation or server segment.
The Ryzen AI 7 350 supports multithreading and includes the NX bit for hardware-level memory protection. Its instruction set support spans MMX, SSE 4.1, SSE 4.2, AES, F16C, FMA3, AVX, and AVX2, covering a wide range of workloads from legacy compatibility through to vectorized floating-point and encryption-accelerated operations. The AVX2 extension in particular enables 256-bit integer and floating-point vector processing, while AES hardware support assists with cryptographic tasks at the instruction level.