Socket AM1
Type | PGA-ZIF |
---|---|
Chip form factors | PGA |
Contacts | 721 |
Processors | Desktop APU products Jaguar- and Puma-based (Athlon- and Sempron-SoCs) |
This article is part of the CPU socket series |
Socket FS1b (rebranded as Socket AM1 [1]) is a socket designed by AMD, launched in April 2014[2] for desktop SoCs in the value segment. Socket AM1 is intended for a class of CPUs that contain both an integrated GPU and a chipset, essentially forming a complete SoC implementation, and as such has pins for display, PCI Express, SATA, and other I/O interfaces directly in the socket. AMD's first compatible CPUs, designated as APUs, are 4 socketable chips in the Kabini family of the Jaguar microarchitecture, marketed under the Athlon and Sempron names and announced on April 9, 2014.[3]
The brand names are Athlon and Sempron. The underlying microarchitectures are Jaguar and Puma. All products are SoCs, this means the Chipset is on the die of the APU and not on the motherboard.
While the AMD mobile CPUs are available in one 722-pin package Socket FS1, but not sure whether these notebook CPUs will be compatible with Socket AM1 or vice versa.
Its mobile counterpart is Socket FT3 (BGA-769).
At least one board is supported by coreboot.[4]
See also
References
- ^ "AMD FS1b SoC Socket to be Branded AM1". TechPowerUp. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
- ^ "AMD Announces New AM1 Platform". AMD. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
- ^ "AMD Introduces New Socketed AMD Sempron and AMD Athlon APU Products with AM1 Platform". AMD. Retrieved 9 April 2014.
- ^ "mainboard/biostar: Add support for Biostar AM1ML ver7.x".