Testseek.com have collected 71 expert reviews of the AMD A6-3650 2.6GHz Socket FM1 and the average rating is 76%. Scroll down and see all reviews for AMD A6-3650 2.6GHz Socket FM1.
August 2011
(76%)
71 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
-
0 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
76010071
The editors liked
Radeon 6350D Integrated Graphics
Dual GFX Compatible
100W TDP
Virtualization Technology Support
32 nm
Budget Price
Nice Overclock
Low Power
Affordable
Dual-Graphics Support
Integrated DX11 GPU Core
The editors didn't like
Moderate Statistical CPU performance
HiTech Legion Gold Award
Discuss this review in our forums
X86 Performance Well Below Intel
More Performance Available For Minimal Additional Investment
Abstract: Benchmarking 86 CPUs takes a while. After long last, though, we have 51 models from AMD and 35 from Intel tested in our current suite. If you want to know how your processor sizes up to its competition, you'll find plenty of comparison data inside! 86 C...
Abstract: This time we'd like to offer you the summarized test results of as many as 71 processors. This generally marks the end of the year, not the end of another test method's life cycle (like the last time). We believe this summary contains all important pro...
Abstract: We’ve written a lot about AMD’s first Llano CPU lately, but time was scarce on each occasion, and we’ve somehow failed to look at it from the practical side. In the meantime, another CPU from the series came out, as did a new motherboard signed by ASUS...
The A6-3650 APU is a quad core CPU with decent performance integrated graphics supporting DX11 which exceeds by far the current IGP performance from Intel Sandy Bridge CPUs. The Lynx platform as a whole can be recommended for people that will not perf...
The A8-3650 is just what AMD needed before the release of Bulldozer. Zacate, Llano and soon-to-appear Bulldozer looks to give AMD a powerful 1-2-3 punch in the marketplace. OEM manufacturers are chomping at the bit at Fusion technology coupled with a n...
Abstract: After the launch of the first mobile A Series APUs, AMD has now officially launched the desktop processor models. Only two have been launched for now, the A8-3850 and the A6-3650, and we’ve tested them both for you. For AMD, APUs are first and foremos...
Abstract: AMD's Bulldozer architecture is still a few more months away, but now we at least have new APUs to tinker with in the mean time. And while Brazos APUs were aimed at 'surrogates' like nettops/netbooks, the new Sabine and Lynx platforms are more full-fle...
Published: 2011-08-16, Author: James , review by: futurelooks.com
Abstract: Earlier this year, AMD made it very clear that they wanted to challenge Intel in several market segments. The first fight was over low power, light weight laptops with the launch of the AMD E-350 which took on the Intel Atom. It was a grueling match that ...
Moderate Statistical CPU performance, HiTech Legion Gold Award, Discuss this review in our forums
In the lineup of the new Llano APU's, the A6-3650 is supposed to be the more economical choice. What you get is the lesser radeon GPU and the middle of the road CPU speeds when compared to the A8-3850 and A8-3800. This means that the price is much more...
Abstract: As you might know, AMD has managed to remain the leader in graphic chipsets, but Intel still holds both the mobile and hybrid computing markets. This is where the Accelerated Processing Unit (APU) comes in to play for it is a combination of CPU and GPU...