Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

The RTX 4090 is here, but AMD’s RDNA 3 GPUs are right around the corner

Add as a preferred source on Google

The much-anticipated Radeon RX 7000-series graphics cards will drop on November 3, exactly six weeks from today. This is according to Scott Herkelman, who just happens to be the Senior Vice President and General Manager at AMD Radeon, so the date is definite.

“Join us on November 3rd as we launch RDNA 3 to the world!” Herkelman tweeted earlier today, along with a graphic which said “RDNA 3 Nov.” This means AMD will be announcing the new Radeon GPUs on the same day Nvidia announces its new GeForce RTX 40-series chips.

Recommended Videos

Join us on November 3rd as we launch RDNA 3 to the world! More details to come soon! #RDNA3 #AMD pic.twitter.com/oftq1Fjrgt

— Scott Herkelman (@sherkelman) September 20, 2022

The Radeon 7000-series graphics cards are designed with 5nm process technology and promise to be 50% more power efficient while delivering higher performance, thanks to the new RDNA 3. These GPUs will also feature a multi-chip module design with both graphics and memory chiplets installed. We’re also expecting them to have a brand new next-generation Infinity Cache, although details are slim on this right now.

Meanwhile, the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4090 and 4080 were unveiled as the first to feature Nvidia’s brand new Ada Lovelace architecture. They can power through real-time ray tracing and neural rendering without breaking a sweat.

“The age of RTX ray tracing and neural rendering is in full steam,” Jensen Huang, Nvidia’s CEO, said in at the GTC keynote on September 20. “Our new Ada Lovelace architecture takes it to the next level.”

It seems news of AMD’s event timing shook up Nvidia, who raced to get some details out about the RTX 40-series GPU. All that’s left is to get our hands on each of these incredible new graphics cards and put them up against each other. With the AMD Ryzen 7000-series processors, Intel 13th gen Raptor Lake processors, new Arc Alchemist graphics cards, and upcoming Radeon GPUs, 2022 really is shaping up to be the year gaming hardware jumped forward.

Nathan Drescher
Former Computing Writer
Nathan Drescher is a freelance journalist and writer from Ottawa, Canada. He's been writing about technology from around the…
Your Windows 10 PC just got an extra year of security updates, here’s how to get it for free
Free Windows 10 security updates now run through 2027, with three easy enrollment options.
Windows 10

If you are still running Windows 10, Microsoft just handed you some breathing room. The company has quietly extended its free Extended Security Updates program for consumer devices by a full year, pushing the new cutoff to October 12, 2027.

The surprising part is that there was no big announcement. Microsoft simply updated its ESU support page and tucked an editor's note onto a year-old blog post, and that was that.

Read more
Framework found a way to make its new laptop cheaper, but don’t celebrate yet
Laptop 13 Pro buyers are getting a better SSD for less money
Framework Laptop 13 Pro on display at Computex 2026

With RAM and SSD prices rising across the tech industry, Framework has delivered a rare bit of good news for people waiting on the Framework Laptop 13 Pro. The company says it has found a new PCIe Gen 5 SSD from ADATA, the XPG MARS 970, that offers better performance, efficiency, and long-term reliability than the SSD option it had previously qualified.

Framework says the new ADATA SSDs cost substantially less than the earlier Gen 5 SSD option, and the savings are being passed on to buyers. Since Framework has not started shipping Laptop 13 Pro pre-orders yet, existing orders that included the previous Gen 5 SSDs will be switched to the new ADATA drives, with reduced pricing applied to those orders.

Read more
Apple just raised Mac prices, and Prime Day is your last chance to beat the hike
Five MacBook deals at pre-hike prices, while they last.
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

Apple stunned the industry when it launched the MacBook Neo in March 2026 for just $599 ($499 for students), especially as most PC makers were raising prices. Unfortunately, that era is already over. 

On June 25, Apple increased the prices of the MacBook Neo, M5 MacBook Air, and several MacBook Pro models by up to $300. If you've been planning to buy a MacBook, the ongoing Prime Day 2026 sale may be your last opportunity to buy one at the old-time pricing.

Read more