AMD has launched their new Threadripper PRO 7000 WX-series of processors, offering substantial performance improvements across the board. But, exactly how do they compare to Intel’s Xeon W-3400 line?


AMD has launched their new Threadripper PRO 7000 WX-series of processors, offering substantial performance improvements across the board. But, exactly how do they compare to Intel’s Xeon W-3400 line?

With their latest “7000” series of processors, AMD has split their high re-count CPUs into two separate product families: the AMD Threadripper 7000 Series, and the even higher tier AMD Threadripper PRO 7000 WX-Series. But when is it worth it to invest in the PRO line for different content creation workflows?

While the new AMD Threadripper 7000 WX-Series processors have significantly more cores than Photoshop can use, it is still often useful to know how they compare to the previous generation Threadripper PRO 5000 WX-series and Intel’s Xeon W line.

The 96-Core 7995WX is the highest core count desktop CPU on the market. How does it perform for content creation applications on the TRX50 platform?

The new AMD Threadripper 7000 processors provide significant performance gains over the previous generation, but how do the compare to older processors all the way back to the 1st gen Threadripper?

AMD has launched their new Threadripper 7000 series of processors, offering substantial performance improvements across the board. But, exactly how do they compare to Intel’s Xeon W-3400 line?

Photoshop may not be a targeted applications for high core count CPUs like AMD’s new Threadripper 7000 series, but it can be worth knowing how it stacks up against Intel’s Xeon offerings.

The new Intel Core 14th Gen processors are a refresh update of the previous 13th Gen processors. But, how much faster are they for content creation workflows?

Intel typcially holds a small lead in lightly threaded applications like Photoshop, but will the new Intel Core 14th Gen processors allow them to extend this lead even more?

AMD’s Ryzen X3D processors promise incredible performance for gamers and creators. But does the additional cache increase performance for content creation?