Amd A4 3330mx Apu With Radeon Tm Hd Graphics -

You have defeated your opponents.

Day one, Leo booted up Windows 7. The A4’s two cores chugged to life. Loading the OS took 47 seconds. Leo didn't complain; his last computer was a netbook with an Intel Atom. To him, the A4 felt like a rocketship.

“Well,” it whispered to the 4GB stick of DDR3-1333 RAM next to it, “here we go.” amd a4 3330mx apu with radeon tm hd graphics

Leo’s roommate, Marcus, had a desktop with an Intel Core i7 and a dedicated NVIDIA GTX 560 Ti. He mocked the A4 mercilessly. “Dude, your laptop takes a geological era to render a drop-down menu.”

From the moment its first wafer was sliced, the A4 knew it was not destined for greatness. It looked at its own specs: two “Bulldozer” cores, clocked at a modest 2.2 GHz, boosting to 2.6 GHz if it really, really pushed itself. Its Radeon HD 6480G graphics had just 240 shader cores. It was a 32nm chip with a TDP of 45 watts—hot-headed for its size, but not powerful. It was the four-cylinder engine in a world of V8s. You have defeated your opponents

But the little Radeon HD, the TM part of the “Radeon TM HD Graphics,” found its rhythm. It wasn't fast, but it was consistent . It dropped every effect that didn't matter and clung to the core gameplay like a barnacle. Leo learned to play a slow, methodical Protoss. He didn't need 60 fps. He needed prediction.

Leo set the resolution to 1366x768—the native panel. He set graphics to “Low.” Everything low. Shadows off. Effects off. Unit portraits static. Loading the OS took 47 seconds

And for a 32nm, dual-core APU with Radeon TM HD Graphics, that was a glorious way to go.