Lisa Su, AMD CEO, announced during the company's Q4 earning call that Ryzen CPUs would debut in early March, while Vega GPUs will come to market in Q2. AMD has a busy 2017 launch schedule that also includes Naples server chips in Q2 and the Zen core-based Raven Ridge APUs in the second half of the year.

Su said the company would initially offer its leading Ryzen products in conjunction with a wide range of system integrators, and a staged OEM launch will commence shortly thereafter. We've already seen a growing range of motherboards and systems during CES 2016 along with a rash of AM4-compatibility announcements from various cooling solutions vendors, so it's clear AMD has worked feverishly to enable the Ryzen ecosystem.

AMD's messaging during its New Horizon event made it clear that it plans to assault the i5 and i7 space with its leading products, but the company also has plans to address the entire desktop spectrum with future Ryzen processors. Su noted that the combination of high-end Ryzen CPUs and Vega GPUs would allow the company to quickly grab share in the high-performance segment, in which it has notably suffered for several years, and the forthcoming lower-end SKUs will presumably fill out the high-volume mainstream portfolio.

Ryzen's launch denotes AMD's jump from 28nm/32nm to its new 14nm process. Due to fuzzy marketing math, we can't be sure how AMD's 14nm process compares to Intel's, but Su also noted that AMD is also moving forward with next-generation 7nm Zen products. Su referred to the next-generation products as "Zen 2" and "Zen 3." The company previously announced that it would provide a Zen+ variant as the successor to the original Zen core, but hasn't specified what lithography it will use for the "+" products. It's possible that Zen+ will be a tock-equivalent, while Zen 2 and 3 represent future shrinks. Meanwhile, Intel soldiers on with its commitment to its 10nm platform, so we may see its 10nm process slug it out with 7nm AMD products in the future.

AMD's move to 7nm isn't entirely surprising; the company recently signed a long-term Wafer Supply Agreement (WSA) with GlobalFoundries. The five-year agreement came on the heels of a GlobalFoundries announcement that it plans to skip the 10nm node, which it considers a half-node, in favor of moving directly to its 7nm process. AMD hopes the long-term roadmap to more efficient nodes will assuage the skittish enterprise customers that "invest in the roadmap" just as much as in the leading products.

AMD is also doing well on the financial front. The company spent the last two years rebuilding the pillars of its business, which includes its technical, operational, and financial initiatives, through several strategic maneuvers. The long-term GlobalFoundries WSA immediately jumps to mind as a key enabler, but AMDs joint venture with Chinese state-backed companies also has investors crooning. AMD's stock jumped over 300% last year following its announcement that it is sharing CPU (including Zen) and SoC technology through its The Tianjin Haiguang Technology Investment Co. Ltd. (THATIC) venture.

AMD scored $4.27 billion in revenue during 2016, a 7% year-over-year improvement, and reduced its operating losses from $419 million in 2015 to $117 million. During Q4, AMD's net loss totaled only $51 million, which highlights its near-return to profitability. AMD also has $1.26 billion in cash and cash equivalents, which provides much-needed breathing room.

All told, the company has done a solid job of repairing its financial and operational foundation before Ryzen makes its appearance, but the proof is always in the silicon. Much of AMD's near-term success will lay in the success of its Ryzen CPUs, which leaves us waiting until March for the verdict.