When Tesla announced its model and model X refreshed in January, it was not shy to say that its new infotainment systems will offer up to 10 teraflops of power. At the time, rumors assumed that AMD provided Tesla’s new graphics hardware. This makes sense, because the company’s GPUs 2 of the company are also behind the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X / S series. Today, during his computex Keynote, AMD Lisa Su CEO confirmed these rumors while noting that the new Teslas will have AMD Apus (Ryzen chips with integrated Radeon graphics) in their infotainment systems.
Su noted that DNDA 2 graphics hit when you play something that requires a ton of power. It is similar to how some laptops jonge integrated and discrete graphics cards. It also makes sense for teslas because you would not want to wear your battery life keeping a high active high power GPU all the time.
So, why would you need console quality graphics in your car? On the one hand, you may want to make a cram in a little game during lunch or prolonged loading session. The updated teslas also have two screens: a 17-inch display at the front and a smaller on the back for passengers. So even if the driver does not get a lot of time to play, there is a good chance that people in the backflow. (At the very least, it’s a good way to keep the kids silent.)
To be honest, however, the decent graphical power looks like a data in cars starting at $ 74,000.