The AMD Zen CPU architecture is now called Ryzen (pronounced rye-zen, not rizen). Perhaps more importantly, though, as we creep towards Ryzen's promised Q1 2017 release date, AMD has finally revealed some solid specs for a chip based on Ryzen cores.
The first Ryzen-based part will be the Summit Ridge family of high-end desktop chips. Summit Ridge chips will feature an 8-core 16-thread CPU—which is a true 8-core chip using simultaneous multithreading instead of the much maligned clustered multithreading of Bulldozer—with the top-end part sporting a base clock of 3.4GHz. While that isn't as speedy as Intel's latest quad-core desktop parts (the i7-6700K has a base clock of 4GHz), it is more than competitive with Intel's 8C/16T Broadwell-E processor, which has a base clock of 3.2GHz.
Of course, clock speed isn't everything (otherwise, we'd still all be rocking Pentium 4 processors), but there was a concern that Ryzen's clock speeds would be way off the mark, somewhat negating the promised 40 percent improvement to instructions-per-clock (IPC). That AMD is hitting good clock speeds—and is doing it at under 100W TDP, far below the 140W TDP of Broadwell-E—is extremely promising.
Moreover, AMD claims to have plenty of processing power left on tap, thanks to a host of efficiency tweaks it's dubbed SenseMI (Machine Intelligence). The first is "Pure Power," which is a set of temperature, clock speed, and voltage sensors that promise more efficient power delivery to the CPU. "Precision Boost" takes that information and uses it to adjust the clock speed on-the-fly "without halts or queue drains" in small 25MHz increments.
This ties into "Extended Frequency Range" (XFR), which AMD claims will boost the clock speed of Ryzen outside of the (as yet unspecified) typical range if a user has suitably robust cooling. Those running big air coolers, all-in-one liquid coolers, or full watercooling loops will apparently see a big improvement compared to a stock cooler. The process is entirely automated, so even those without any overclocking skills can gain a performance boost. That said, fully manual overclocking is still supported for power users.