Quote from: BokiN on July 24, 2023, 21:45:02Don't understand where this "slow" memory controller is coming from.
The shame of AMD is that, as I wrote about many times, that in the 45 Zen4 series, they have a total required bandwidth for simultaneous service at the peak of 28 pci-e 5.0 lines exceeds 110Gbyte/s, and real RAM works at best at a speed of 70Gbyte/s, and only for the soldered lpddr5 variant, and in the case of memory in slots, everything is much worse.
It's just nonsense - to make an SoC that is not able to serve all the pci-e links at the same time.
Apple's memory controller is literally over 5x faster than the best mobile AMD Zen4s, in the same soldered configuration.
Peripheral requirements have skyrocketed, and x86 memory controllers are growing at a rate of 10-15% in 2 years...
The complete failure of the x86 architecture is obvious to all IT experts. Intel is fussing and has now introduced an urgent APX extension for the x86 architecture, but it's a dead poultice - x86 memory controllers slower than it should be at times for consumers are leading to a gradual global defeat of the x86 architecture.
Nothing is eternal. x86 is dying and that's a fact.
The only way to revive the x86 corpse is a radical transition to 512-bit HBM with a throughput of 400GByte/s.