The
AMD E-350 is a mobile processor and has a total of 2 cores with 2 threads. It comes from the 1st generation of the AMD E series and uses a mainboard with a BGA 413 socket. It was released in the first quarter of 2011. The
AMD E-350 does not support Hyperthreading and cannot be overclocked either, it runs at a base clock frequency of 1.60 GHz.
The AMD E-350 has an integrated graphics unit called AMD Radeon HD 6310, which was manufactured at 40 nm and released in the fourth quarter of 2010. The integrated graphics has one execution unit and 80 shaders. It runs at a graphics clock speed of 490 MHz and has a maximum memory of one gigabyte. The graphics unit can work with up to two screens at the same time and supports DirectX 11. The
AMD E-350 can decode h264, AVC, VC-1 and decode and encode JPEG.
The processor memory type is DDR3-1066 with one memory channel. The TDP (Thermal Design Power) is 18 watts. It was built with the Zacate (Bobcat) architecture and its L3 cache is 1 megabyte. The full x86-64 instruction set (ISA) is supported, so the processor is fully 64-bit capable, and it also has the extensions SSE4a, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, AVX.
In the Cinebench R20 (single core) test, the AMD E-350 achieved a full 50 points, putting it ahead of the AMD E-450. In Cinebench R20 (multi-core), the
AMD E-350 achieved a total of 93 points and is thus above the AMD G-T48E. In the Geekbench 5 (64-bit, single-core) test, the AMD E-350 achieved a total of 133 points and is therefore only slightly below the MediaTek Helio A25. In the Geekbench 5 (64-bit, multi-core) test, it achieved a total of 252 points and is above the Intel Celeron 440 processor with these points. The theoretical computing power of the internal graphics unit (single precision) is 79 GigaFLOPS.
- Integrated AMD Radeon HD 6310 graphics
- High energy efficiency
- Ideal for compact and inexpensive systems
- Based on the Zacate architecture