The company will offer a line of chips, collectively dubbed Business Class, which it promises to make available for at least two years.
AMD hopes this will allow vendors to extend the lifecycle on PCs sold to smaller enterprises.
"IT decision makers have a broad range of commercial client solutions to choose from and it is not always clear which systems deliver the best business value," said Dirk Meyer, president and chief operating officer at AMD.
"AMD Business Class processors are based on the same innovative technology that powers the world's most advanced servers.
"Our solutions are designed to give commercial customers the assurance that the platforms are designed with their business in mind to help get more from their computing infrastructure for longer."
The Business Class chips will include AMD's Phenom processors, which will be available in three-core and quad-core versions. The company will also offer PC builders the option of an Athlon dual-core chip.
PC manufacturers will also be offered a commercial desktop platform that combines Business Class processors with AMD's 780V graphics chipset or ATI's Radeon HD 3000 discrete graphics cards.
AMD plans to extend the Business Class programme to notebooks when it releases the Puma platform later this year.
AMD takes aim at small businesses
By
Shaun Nichols
on Apr 30, 2008 6:21AM

In The Spotlight
Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Partner Content

Promoted Content
Microsoft, Yealink and Alloy’s roadshows fire up the Australian channel

Promoted Content
Is business nbn Enterprise Ethernet the future of business connectivity for MSPs?

Promoted Content
Tradewinds has turned unified communications into an easier upsell

Promoted Content
Why rock-solid MSPs services require unified infrastructure monitoring

Promoted Content
How to prepare for the increasing demand for cloud-ready partners