AMD is set to unveil its Zen 6 'Venice' EPYC server CPU lineup at its Advancing AI event in San Francisco on July 22 and 23.
According to an interview with The CUBE, AMD Chief Technology Officer and Executive Vice President, Mark Papermaster, confirmed that 6th Generation Zen CPUs will be introduced at the event. Venice is designed to enhance traditional enterprise x86 workloads, while also forming the backbone of Helios AI racks, paired with AMD MI455X GPUs.
Zen 6 EPYC processors have been in full production for some time. They're built with TSMC's 2nm process. It's believed to be the first high-performance product to enter production. Venice can scale up to 256 cores, with up to 1.6 TB/s of per-socket bandwidth. It brings PCIe 6.0 and 16-channel DDR5 support. It also introduces new AVX and VNNI extensions, making them well-suited to AI workloads.

Helios is AMD's rack-scale AI compute platform designed for cutting-edge LLM training and inference. It's designed to compete with NVIDIA's NVL72 racks. AMD touts its support for open standards, x86 architecture and memory capacity advantages over NVL72. But, the NVIDIA CUDA ecosystem remains dominant, and AMD has its work cut out if it wants to outperform the NVIDIA goliath.
As expected, AMD is allocating its production capacity for high-margin EPYC processors. Consumer Zen 6 is at least several months away, with a CES 2027 launch possible, though nothing is confirmed.

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The Advancing AI event kicks off on July 22, and we hope to get some more juicy info on Zen 6, even if consumers are going to be left hanging for some time to come.






