The AMD Ryzen AI 7 Pro 450GE is a desktop processor built for the AM5 socket, compatible with a range of chipsets including X670, B650, X870, B840, and B850. It is manufactured on a 4nm process node and carries a thermal design power of 35W, with a maximum operating temperature of 95°C. The chip includes integrated graphics, supports 64-bit computing, and implements PCIe version 4, rounding out a general specification profile suited to low-power desktop configurations.
The processor runs 8 cores at a base speed of 2GHz each, supporting 16 threads for concurrent workload handling, while a turbo clock of 5.1GHz is available for single-threaded bursts. The clock multiplier is set at 20, and the multiplier is locked, meaning manual overclocking is not supported. Cache is layered across 640KB of L1, 8MB of L2 at 1MB per core, and 16MB of L3 at 2MB per core. The chip does not use big.LITTLE heterogeneous core architecture, meaning all cores follow a uniform design.
The integrated graphics solution is the Radeon 860M, operating at a base clock of 600MHz and capable of boosting up to 3100MHz. It supports DirectX 12 Ultimate and OpenGL 4.6, alongside OpenCL 2.1 for compute workloads. On the hardware side, the GPU includes 512 shading units, 32 texture mapping units, and 16 render output units, forming a moderately capable integrated graphics configuration for general display and light graphical tasks.
The processor supports DDR5 memory across two channels, with a maximum rated speed of 5600MHz. System memory can be configured up to 256GB, providing ample headroom for memory-intensive workloads. The platform also supports ECC memory, which allows for error detection and correction, a feature relevant in reliability-focused desktop deployments.
The processor supports multithreading and includes the NX bit for hardware-level memory protection against certain code execution exploits. It implements a broad set of instruction sets covering MMX, F16C, FMA3, AES, AVX, AVX2, SSE 4.1, and SSE 4.2, enabling support for a wide range of software-level operations including vectorized math, encryption, and floating-point processing.