The introduction of the
AMD Fusion APU has sparked a
lot of curiosity among consumers who only had Intel’s Atom and ULVs as
lone choices for netbooks and ultraportables for a long time. Among
AMD’s new CPU line-up is the dual-core E-350 running at 1.6GHz.
AMD’s Fusion APU can be considered a direct competitor to Intel’s HD
Graphics embedded chip, specifically the one on the Core i3. It can also
be compared to the older Intel Core 2 Duo ULV processors with Intel GMA
4500 chips or the newer set of dual-core Atom processors coupled with
NVidia Ion2 chip.
So what we have here below is a line-up of ultraportables running
various Intel and AMD chips with their Windows Experience Index taken
during review.
Intel Core i3 330UM ULV @ 1.2GHz with Intel HD Graphics
(Asus UL20FT)Intel Core 2 Duo SU7300 @ 1.3GHz with Intel GMA 4500MHD
(Asus UL20A)Intel Atom D525 Dual Core @ 1.8GHz with NVidia Ion2
(Asus Eee PC 1215N)AMD Athlon II Neo K125 @ 1.7GHz with ATI Radeon HD 4225
(Acer Aspire One 721)AMD Athlon II Neo K325 @ 1.3GHz with ATI Radeon HD 4225
(Acer Aspire 1551)AMD E-350 @ 1.6GHz with AMD Radeon HD6310
(Sony Vaio Y)In terms of processor, the AMD E-350 is just below the old Intel ULVs
by a couple of points and much lower than a ULV Core i3. However, it
beats the Intel Atom D525 Dual Core @ 1.8GHz processor by a significant
difference.
It’s actually in the graphics department where the E-350 with its
Radeon HD6310 trumps everybody else — Intel GMA 4500MHD, Intel HD
Graphics and even beating the NVidia Ion2 as well.
Here’s a chart of WEI sub-scores of all netbook/ultraportable CPUs we’ve tested before.
The
AMD E-350 chip has a TDP of 18watts which is
exactly the same the Intel Core i3-330UM so it terms of battery life,
they’re pretty much at par with each other. This comparison is only
based on WEI and is in-conclusive but that should give us a good birds
eye view of where AMD’s Fusion APU is positioned.