Aug 5, 2011 10:11 GMT  ·  By

AMD has recently updated its product page for the A-Series accelerated processing units to include two new dual-core chips based on the Llano architecture, the A4-3400 and E2-3200, suggesting that the launch of these APUs is imminent.

According to the specs posted by the Sunnyvale-based chip maker, the two accelerated processing units have a TDP of 65W and are compatible with motherboards using the FM1 socket.

Starting with the most powerful of the two options, the A4-3400, this will include dual processing cores clocked at 2.7GHz, 1MB of Level 2 cache memory and an integrated Radeon HD 6410D graphic core, which includes 160 shader units clocked at 600MHz.

Its smaller brother, the E2-3200, is also built to include dual processing cores, but this time their clock speed is set at 2400MHz.

Outside of this change, the chip features pretty much the same specifications as the A4-3400 since it also includes 1MB of Level 2 cache and an integrated DDR3-1600 memory controller, while the Radeon HD 6370D on-die GPU packs the same 160 stream processors.

Compared with the Radeon HD 6410D used in the A4-3400, the E2-3200 is still somewhat slower as the shaders are clocked at just 443MHz.

None of the two chips support the Turbo Core technology, which automatically adjusts clock speeds depending on the processor load.

By the end of this year, AMD is expected to launch three other Llano APUs, including the top of the line A8-3870 Black Edition chip that will feature an unlocked multiplier, 3.1GHz quad processing cores with 4MB of Level 2 cache memory, an integrated dual-channel DDR3-1866MHz controller, and Radeon HD 6550D graphics.

AMD hasn't provided us with an official release date for the A4-3400 and E2-3200, but the listing of the APUs could point out to an imminent launch. (via ComputerBase)

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AMD A-Series LLano APU product packaging
AMD A-Series Llano APU desktop chips
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