The
AMD A10-4657M was a notable mobile
APU. It was ahead of its time and offered many versatile application possibilities back then. At the heart of this unit beat the
Trinity architecture. This combined CPU and graphics performance on a single chip. This was especially intended for notebooks that required a balanced ratio of computing power and graphics capabilities.
Manufactured in a 32 nm process, the
AMD A10-4657M offered a solid basis for everyday tasks. The integrated graphics, the AMD Radeon HD 7660G, represented one of its greatest strengths. It enabled a smooth multimedia experience at the time. Even playing less demanding titles was possible. We appreciated this combination.
It handled many applications without a separate graphics card. The processor had 4 MB of Level 3 cache. In addition, there was a maximum memory bandwidth of 26 GB/s. That was well equipped for its time. Even though we are used to different standards today, the
AMD A10-4657M delivered reliable performance.
It was a solid companion for office work and surfing the web.
- Integrated graphics (AMD Radeon HD 7660G)
- APU concept (CPU and GPU on one chip)
- Solid performance for everyday tasks
- Trinity architecture