The AMD Ryzen AI 9 Pro 465 is designed for both laptop and desktop use, built on a 4nm semiconductor process and operating within a 28W thermal design power envelope, with a maximum CPU temperature of 100°C. It includes integrated graphics and fully supports 64-bit computing, while connectivity is handled through a PCI Express 4 interface. These characteristics reflect a chip balanced for versatile deployment across portable and stationary platforms alike.
The processor features a ten-core layout using big.LITTLE technology, with four cores and six cores each running at 2GHz base, and a turbo clock speed reaching up to 5GHz for sustained peak demand. It exposes 20 threads in total, enabling broad parallel workload handling without an unlocked multiplier. Cache resources include 10MB of L2 and 24MB of L3 cache, providing a tiered memory buffer that helps reduce latency during data-intensive tasks.
The integrated Radeon 890M operates at a base GPU clock of 400MHz and can boost up to a 2900MHz turbo frequency, with rendering backed by 1024 shading units, 64 texture mapping units, and 32 render output units. It supports up to four simultaneous displays and is compatible with DirectX 12, OpenGL 4.6, and OpenCL 2.1, covering a broad range of graphics and compute workloads without requiring a discrete card.
This processor supports DDR5 memory at speeds up to 8533MHz across a dual-channel configuration, allowing for balanced bandwidth in memory-intensive scenarios. It can address a maximum of 256GB of RAM, and includes support for ECC memory, which enables error detection and correction — a consideration for workloads where data integrity is a priority.
The processor includes multithreading support and an NX bit for hardware-level memory protection against certain code execution exploits. Its instruction set support spans MMX, AVX, AVX2, FMA3, F16C, AES, SSE 4.1, and SSE 4.2, covering a wide range of operations from floating-point and vector processing to hardware-accelerated encryption, making it well-equipped for varied computational tasks at the instruction level.