AMD Kabini AM1 Athlon 5350 APU (FS1b) Review

Published by

eTeknix checked out the AMD Kabini AM1 Athlon 5350 APU (FS1b)

A quote from the article:
Today we are looking at AMD's new AM1 platform and given that I am writing with the realms of a traditional ?tech enthusiast? website you'll either think this is a great platform with potential, or just too slow to add anything new to the market. However, I am in the former, not the latter, camp ? I can see the massive potential of AMD's socketed Kabini APU. I have always been keen on budget and small form factor computing solutions; the Raspberry Pi is a great example of something that caught my eye. Of course at just $35 the Raspberry Pi is hardly comparable to AMD's new Kabini socketed APUs that will cost a similar amount for just the APU. However, you can build a Kabini quad core system with a motherboard for just $64 ? less than twice the cost of Raspberry Pi but no doubt with way more than twice the performance. The ethos with AMD's AM1 platform is to bring the Athlon and Sempron product lines (that are orientated towards value for money and ?upgradeability?) back with a bang.

While the AM1 system may seem like it is catering to a small market ? it isn't! The majority of PCs are bought in those entry level and mainstream price points ? below $200-300 shall we say. Yet if we look at emerging markets in Latin America, the Middle East, Africa and so on, then we find that the sub $200 price point is even more popular. As a result the majority of Windows-orientated desktop systems that will be delivered in the future are likely to be in the entry level and mainstream categories. That logic is AMD's justification for the AM1 platform ? it will deliver Windows capable PCs for a fraction of the cost of traditional desktop systems.
 AMD Kabini AM1 Athlon 5350 APU (FS1b) Review @ eTeknix