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Posted by Jörg A.
 - August 27, 2020, 18:45:44
Does anyone with an Ideapad 5 with Ryzen 4800u experience BSOD when playing games (on steam)? Read some reports, so I'm currently not sure if I should buy that machine.
Thanks!
Posted by 4800U owner
 - August 21, 2020, 13:42:33
Like others wrote before, Lenovo is selling (or sold) 4800U laptops already.
I'm writing this on my IdeaPad 5 15" with 4800U and all the best options I could configure it with, coming to a price of 550€ (incl 19% VAT). It was a steal!

In Extreme Performance mode (25W instead of 15) I'm scratching at 4000 points in Cinebench R20 multi core and 488 single core.
Posted by GordonnotRamsay
 - August 11, 2020, 13:27:36
I really often wonder why they make these things so fast. It's not like software upgrades as often. It's almost always buggy with new processors.
Posted by Dean Woodyatt
 - August 04, 2020, 16:06:26
I had delivered back in June an Ideapad 5, 15" with a 4800U / 16Gig

The thing flies! - the benchmarks you see online are actually less than what I'm regularly getting when in extreme mode!

Plays games superbly too, Skyrim with HQ texture pack - everything ultra
Starcraft - everything max
Fortnite  - everything max

Very Very happy - and it only cost £500! I'd need to spend double that to get a similarly performing DESKTOP!

Posted by anaconda
 - July 21, 2020, 17:38:39
Got my Lenovo Slim 7 4800U today. Installing soon a second nvme ssd in it. Looks promising, screen is of course quite glossy.
Posted by Cryio
 - July 20, 2020, 22:17:55
Ironically, I have a friend with an Lenovod IdeaPad 5 with 4800U. Wants to sell it given he likes Macbook Airs overall construction, screen and keyboard layout more.

Also,wasn't the 4900U the top 15W CPU?
Posted by _MT_
 - July 20, 2020, 20:15:07
Quote from: marc s on July 20, 2020, 19:03:54
Don't rule out Intel's hand in all this. They have deep pockets and continue to control OEMs like puppets on a financial string. COVID can slow down a supply chain, but that's not the whole story. I suspect the OEM's are playing it timid with the 4000 series and waiting for the 5000 series to hit the streets in the next few months. Also Intel's refresh eats up a lot of resources so AMD products generally get 2nd priority.

The other interesting thing is how they are keeping the Ryzen 4000s in more of the lower to mid-range products while giving Intel all the high end business. I don't think this is a coincidence. It's easy to find an Icelake laptop with NVIDIA RTX2070 chipset, but the same laptop in AMD form only uses its Vega 8 iGPU. Displays are another weakness. Except for the HP 455 G7, good luck finding a display over 250 nits with AMD inside.

The OEM's really don't think we notice? We do. Clean your act up!
>:(
While I can believe Intel is doing all it can, there is only so much money they can give OEMs. If OEMs actually believed that Renoir is going to be a huge success, there is IMO no way Intel could compensate them for the lost opportunity. It's not one big global cartel. They would stand to lose significant market share to companies that went with AMD. So, the question is just how much faith they have in AMD. The market is not made of enthusiasts. And buyers don't necessarily behave rationally. It's amazing what AMD did with U series chips but what does an average user of a high-end ultrabook (like X1 Carbon) do that can take advantage of it? Can they even tell the difference? Certainly, there are people who can.

It seems clear that server and desktop business has priority for AMD. Not only AMD lacks engineering resources to support laptop OEMs (which is very much necessary), they might be struggling with manufacturing capacities as well. Which could explain the spotty availability.
Posted by brad
 - July 20, 2020, 19:09:23
"AMD may be seeing no real rush to push the Ryzen 7 4800U to market just yet as a result — at least until Tiger Lake becomes widely available."

Are you suggesting this is voluntary? No way. Something's going on here, and after reading this article I still have no idea what it is.
Posted by marc s
 - July 20, 2020, 19:07:54
Quote from: MOFO on July 20, 2020, 16:34:28
At this point its a joke waiting for a 4800u and might as well wait for TigerLake.
Very, very disappointing. Oh well life goes on

you might want to consider the HP 855 Gen 7 due out in August, it sports the Ryzen 4750 which like the 4800U support 8C/16T. It's a business laptop and a bit more expensive, but it will deliver in performance. I am guessing like the 455 Gen 7 it will also have the 1,000 nits display option.

Don't run to Intel, they are counting on you doing that.
Posted by marc s
 - July 20, 2020, 19:03:54
Don't rule out Intel's hand in all this. They have deep pockets and continue to control OEMs like puppets on a financial string. COVID can slow down a supply chain, but that's not the whole story. I suspect the OEM's are playing it timid with the 4000 series and waiting for the 5000 series to hit the streets in the next few months. Also Intel's refresh eats up a lot of resources so AMD products generally get 2nd priority.

The other interesting thing is how they are keeping the Ryzen 4000s in more of the lower to mid-range products while giving Intel all the high end business. I don't think this is a coincidence. It's easy to find an Icelake laptop with NVIDIA RTX2070 chipset, but the same laptop in AMD form only uses its Vega 8 iGPU. Displays are another weakness. Except for the HP 455 G7, good luck finding a display over 250 nits with AMD inside.

The OEM's really don't think we notice? We do. Clean your act up!
>:(
Posted by Junglist724
 - July 20, 2020, 19:02:27
Quote from: seriously? on July 20, 2020, 15:43:57
Because of COVID?

Is this article necessary?

Every computer component manufacturer saw only a brief slump in production due to COVID and are already back up to speed. Silicon fabs in particular couldn't afford to reduce production at all as they would potentially take a year to ramp back up to full production. This probably would have happened even without the pandemic.
Posted by MOFO
 - July 20, 2020, 16:34:28
At this point its a joke waiting for a 4800u and might as well wait for TigerLake.
Very, very disappointing. Oh well life goes on
Posted by seriously?
 - July 20, 2020, 15:43:57
Because of COVID?

Is this article necessary?
Posted by anaconda
 - July 20, 2020, 14:58:05
They are now shipping. My Slim 7 4800U arrives 21.7.2020 so tomorrow.

There are lots of bencmark results for these chips, they are just all sold out, thats why its hard to find them.
Posted by k
 - July 20, 2020, 14:38:05
they are selling AMD in bleck here in India. asus tuf priced 63900 is bieng sold for 70k approx and so on. they are intentionally missing RTX on AMD. with ultrabook they are soldering ram max 8gb without additional slot. they are not leaving any stone unturn to screw AMD. Big mistake AMD did was average IGP and then giving explicit right (4800hs) to crook asus like companies. Actually poor display lesser ram not just give intel an edge which is oofering comparable price, but also bring bad name since ryzen 7 will simply do nothing when choked with 8gb ram with shared memory. and people unaware will only blame AMD for poor performance.