Home / PC / Gaming PC / AMD Radeon graphics cards return to Origin PC

AMD Radeon graphics cards return to Origin PC

This week Advanced Micro Devices and Origin PC, a boutique computer maker from the U.S., officially buried the hatchet and resumed collaborative work after a year-long hiatus. Last year Origin PC officially said it would only use Nvidia GeForce graphics cards for its systems. Thanks to renewed approach and some other refinements, AMD Radeon graphics cards are back inside Origin PC’s gaming systems, which is a good news for AMD in general.

In October, 2013, Origin PC announced that it would cease to use AMD Radeon graphics adapters in its personal computers citing performance, drivers and stability reasons. Later on it transpired that the communications between Origin PC and AMD were completely improper. AMD did not notify Origin PC of its product launches. For example, Origin was not made aware of AMD’s new Hawaii GPU launch in October of 2013, reports Forbes. But there were things worse than that: lack of proper support.

“Communication was drastically inconsistent and unreliable. I can’t even tell you how many different people we have been sent to over the past four years because the number is so high that we have lost count,” said Kevin Wasielewski, a co-founder of Origin PC, in an interview with the Bright Side of News. “When we had issues with their product we had to jump through hoops to get someone to help us quickly diagnose and solve the issue. When new products launched we would not get them in a timely manner and we had to juggle the possibility of having to risk launch just to remain up to date on our site (we never did and instead launched late).”

origin_pc_1

Apparently, AMD and Origin PC have managed to solve all the problems by now thanks to hands-on approach of Roy Taylor, vice president of global channel sales, who negotiated face to face with Mr. Wasielewski in order to get AMD Radeon products back into Origin’s gaming systems.

“A year ago we weren’t getting any communication or support from AMD,” said the Origin PC executive during an interview during a Maximum PC podcast. “We didn’t want to make a move like that, but we thought we had to. Now, Roy Taylor has been in contact with me along with the rest of the AMD team and things are completely different from a year ago.”

Mr. Taylor said that the renewed collaboration with Origin PC is just element in the company’s turnaround strategy and many others would follow.

“We’re coming from the back foot,” added the VP of AMD. “You guys know this. AMD’s in a bit of a turnaround but we’re working really hard. We have a lot of work to do to win everybody’s trust.”

Discuss on our Facebook page, HERE.

KitGuru Says: It is good to see AMD back inside Origin’s PCs. In many ways this means that AMD is getting better in general as a company. Typically, better companies produce better products.

Become a Patron!

Check Also

Nvidia reportedly ramps up production on RTX 50 GPUs

Nvidia is reportedly shifting things up in the production lines as it gears up for the launch of its next-gen RTX 50 series graphics cards.

4 comments

  1. Glad to see AMD is finally upping its game but it needs to focus on markets. It shares a split between both CPU and GPU’s whereas the other two competitors (Intel and nVidia) can focus their efforts which sticks AMD in a hard position and quite honestly out of its depth. Its been focusing on its GPU’s at the moment but isnt doing anything CPU based besides the APU units. In a way, its a little bit of an unfair game. Have to commend AMD for holding on this long and trying to release better quality products

  2. The thing is, an APU is not a CPU. Essentially all Intel iX processors are APUs, as they have graphics chips built in. Only the Xeons have no GPU. AMD are making the division clearly between their APU and CPU products. They aren’t needlessly bloating their processors physically or in price by adding graphical units into the FX line, and nor are they creating APUs with hopelessly incapable graphical units (rather ones that can realistically be used, and not just for running a desktop). Intel are still putting these GPUs in their consumer line, despite the fact that anyone with an i7 will probably have dedicated graphics.

  3. Was under the impression given at the time that Nvidia was playing dirty and bought exclusivity bullshyt given via news and things like gaming tiribe. Thus why their no longer sponsors

  4. The next high end AMD CPU should be called the Phenom III or maybe even Phenom FX, The Phenom II was a beast for its day and I’m still running a Phenom II x4 965 BE and I have it overclocked.