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AMD wants you to buy a 2,000 'agent PC' just for AI

PCWorld

PCWorld reports AMD's new "agent PC" concept featuring Ryzen AI Max+ processors designed to run AI agents continuously as dedicated secondary machines. These $2,000+ systems offer 128GB memory capacity and local AI processing through OpenClaw platform, providing privacy advantages over cloud solutions. High component costs and complex installation processes currently limit consumer adoption, with alternatives like Raspberry Pi potentially more practical. You already have a laptop or desktop PC, but now AMD thinks you need another one--an "agent PC" to support your main machine. AMD has responded to the growing success of OpenClaw's AI agents with a new suggestion: customers should buy "agent PCs," which would take the power of the Ryzen AI Max+ processor (surprise!) and repurpose it to run an agent swarm.



AMD adds Ryzen 7 9850X3D, new AI Max chips to boost PC punch

PCWorld

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. AMD is doubling down on some of its most successful processor lines. AMD is using CES 2026 as a launch vehicle to add several of its popular Ryzen AI Max+ and Ryzen 9000 X3D processors to its stack, but the real story might be the performance improvements AMD is claiming as part of its updated ROCm software instead. AMD is adding two processors to its Ryzen AI Max+ series: the Ryzen AI Max+ 392, and the Ryzen AI Max+ 388. It is also tucking the Ryzen 7 9850X3D inside its matrix of Ryzen 9000 X3D gaming processors, hopefully adding a more affordable alternative.


AMD's Ryzen AI 400 processors play it safe, but add desktops too

PCWorld

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. AMD's Ryzen AI 400 processors play it safe, but add desktops too AMD is launching the Ryzen AI 400 at CES 2026 as the next chip in the company's CPU roadmap, with what appears to be a similar goal as the current Ryzen AI 300: Aim high on CPU performance, but with sufficient AI TOPS and battery life to attract mainstream laptop buyers, too. AMD said that the Ryzen AI 400 chips will power both Copilot+ laptops as well as "socketed desktops," bringing their AI capabilities to desktop PCs as well. AMD also announced "Pro" configurations of most of the chips, designed to power enterprise PCs. AMD executives didn't refer to the AI 400 by its expected codename, Gorgon Point, but the chip's specs matched up with a leak inadvertently published last year: up to 12 cores and 24 threads using the Zen 5 architecture, with a boost clock that can hit 5.2GHz.


AMD's Ryzen AI 400 chips are a big boost for laptops and desktops alike

Engadget

AMD's Ryzen AI 400 chips are a big boost for laptops and desktops alike The whole AI PC trend didn't exactly set the world on fire last year, but, like clockwork, AMD is still ready to deliver a new batch of AI chips at CES 2026. The Ryzen AI 400 processors will offer some slight speed upgrades over last year's chips, and notably, they also include AMD's first Copilot+ processors for desktops. Sure, the Copilot+ program didn't really go anywhere, but as I've argued, it at least served as a template for building capable AI PCs. Now we just need some genuinely useful AI features in Windows -- Recall and Copilot's voice commands aren't really compelling enough on their own. AMD's first AI desktop chips, the Ryzen 8000G series, arrived in 2024 with relatively underpowered neural processing units (NPUs) for AI tasks.


AMD at CES 2026: Live updates from CEO Lisa Su's keynote presentation

Engadget

Expect announcements heavy on AI, and maybe an update on new Ryzen chips. NVIDIA and Intel had their moment in the spotlight, and now it's AMD's turn. The chipmaker is kicking off CES 2026 on Monday night, where it'll cover its latest AI developments and perhaps show off its newest Ryzen chips. It's the kickoff keynote of CES 2026, and CEO Dr. Lisa Su is expected to outline how AMD's hardware will power the AI revolution -- and what the company can offer partners and consumers that those aforementioned rivals can't. We'll tell you how to tune in to the livestream and what else you can expect to see.


How to watch the AMD CES 2026 keynote with CEO Lisa Su live

Engadget

CEO Lisa Su will share details about her company's AI solutions and we could see the latest Ryzen chips. AMD is kicking off CES 2026 on Monday, where it'll cover its latest AI developments and perhaps show off its newest Ryzen chips. The company will outline the full scope of its vision for AI implementations across the full spectrum of consumer and enterprise applications. The presentation -- which is the lead keynote for CES 2026 -- will be led by CEO Dr. Lisa Su. We'll tell you how to tune in to the livestream and what else you can expect to see.


How to watch the AMD CES 2026 keynote live

Engadget

CEO Lisa Su will share details about her company's AI solutions and we could see the latest Ryzen chips. AMD is kicking off on Monday, where it'll cover its latest AI developments and perhaps show off its newest Ryzen chips. The company will outline the full scope of its vision for AI implementations from across the full spectrum of consumer and enterprise applications. The presentation -- which is the for CES 2026 -- will be led by CEO Dr. Lisa Su. We'll tell you how to tune in to the livestream and what else you can expect to see.


The Full Nerd awards: Our favorite PC hardware of 2025

PCWorld

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. Plus the one thing we hated. Arguing over the best hardware of the year is usually fun. That's as true as ever in 2025, when Brad Chacos, Adam Patrick Murray, Will Smith, and Alaina Yee (hi, it's me) rolled up our sleeves and got down to the messy business of naming our top hardware picks. This annual tradition on The Full Nerd always involves twists and turns, especially given our individual differences on how we define "best."


AMD CEO Lisa Su Isn't Afraid of the Competition

WIRED

In this episode of we take you through our recent conversation with Lisa Su and go behind the scenes of our Big Interview event. Last week, some of the most forward-thinking minds in tech, culture, and politics came together for WIRED's Big Interview event--a series of live, in-depth conversations with industry leaders. To kick off the event, Lauren Goode sat down with AMD's CEO Lisa Su. In this episode of, hosts Michael Calore and Lauren discuss the key ideas that came up during the interview, as well as the other conversations that caught everyone's attention during the event. Can AI Look at Your Retina and Diagnose Alzheimer's? San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie: 'We Are a City on the Rise' Write to us at uncannyvalley@wired.com . You can always listen to this week's podcast through the audio player on this page, but if you want to subscribe for free to get every episode, here's how: If you're on an iPhone or iPad, open the app called Podcasts, or just tap this link . Mike, I've been pondering the word tape. Because we say we're taping a podcast. I don't think the kids know what that means. I mean, they may know what it means in the abstract, but I don't think they've had the visceral experience of actually recording something onto tape. Be kind, rewind, all of that. No, so I guess we're supposed to say we're recording a podcast now. It's like when people say, let me film that. So then if you have a video podcast, are you shooting the podcast? Do you say taping, then? It covers all the bases. Well, should we record this pod? I would like to, yes. My throat is still feeling a little bit raw, even though it's been like four or five days. You sound delightful to me. I was first up in the morning. Katie, our boss, gave the intro to the conference and then it was me and Lisa Su, the CEO of AMD.