Family 16h

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Revision as of 10:31, 26 August 2024 by Dodoid (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Infobox cpu family |image = JaguarDieshotFromPS4.jpg |image_size = 300 |caption = The die from the Jaguar APU used in the PlayStation 4 |introduced = 2013 |processnode = 28nm, except 16nm in some game consoles |uarch1 = Jaguar |uarch2 = Puma |predecessor = Family 14h |successor = Zen APUs }} '''Family 16h''' (also known as '''fam16h''', or ambiguously as '''fam16''') is a family of AMD microprocessors corresponding to the Jaguar a...")
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Family 16h
The die from the Jaguar APU used in the PlayStation 4
Overview
Introduced2013
Process Node28nm, except 16nm in some game consoles
Microarchitectures
Chronology
PredecessorFamily 14h
SuccessorZen APUs

Family 16h (also known as fam16h, or ambiguously as fam16) is a family of AMD microprocessors corresponding to the Jaguar and Puma microarchitectures. Outside the PC hardware space, it is notable for use in the Xbox One and PlayStation 4 families of eighth-generation game consoles.

Like other AMD family names, 16h ("16 hexadecimal") is a mostly-arbitrary, somewhat-sequential (new processor families receive unused higher family numbers) number, returned by the x86 CPUID instruction as a "Family number", and commonly written in hexadecimal. 16 in hexadecimal corresponds to the number 22 in decimal, meaning that while "Family 22" would also be a valid, if confusing, name for these CPUs, "Family 16" could also refer to Family 10h.