Quote from: Dan EE on May 22, 2020, 08:15:20That is a meaningless statement. The CPU doesn't interface directly with the memory, it interfaces with the memory controller(s). The single- or dual-channel indications generally mean either one or two controllers is in use. When each controller for LPDDR4X can run two channels, the setup is quad channel even if the CPU fails to correctly identify it as such due to the controller effectively aggregating two 32-bit channels into one 64-bit interface. If the CPU was running single or dual channel LPDDR4X, you would halve memory bandwidth, as there is no such thing as a 64-bit wide LPDDR4X channel. The distinction is largerly academic, but given that there are no LPDDR4X chips with a wider interface than 32 bits, that must be what determines the effective number of channels, not the number of controllers in use.
@Valantar Okay, same as Ice Lake. Intel refers to them as sub-channels. The processor still runs single or dual channel modes only.
Quote from: Dan EE on May 22, 2020, 01:27:40It has two memory controllers, each of which can function as a single 64-bit wide DDR4 channel or two (virtual, as they are running off the same controller) 32-bit wide LPDDR4X channels. (Source: Anandtech) Both of course add up to the same total channel width. This setup allows LPDDR4-equipped laptops to not be hobbled by the narrower channels of the mobile-first memory tech (which can even go down to 16-bit channels for applications like smartphones). Thus, total peak bandwidth is higher for the higher clocked LPDDR4X.
@Valantar Where did you get the information that the Ryzen mobile has 4 memory channels? I would be very surprised if it did. Every thing I have read is that it is dual.
The one good thing about getting it with a single channel 8GB SODIMM is that you only have to buy one more to increase it to 16GB. Not something the average user will do. It should have either 2x4GB or 2x8GB modules as options.
@Debra - What to recommended depends on what you are using it for and how long you plan on keeping it. Home business and meeting with customers, school with light gaming, photoshop, web developement, casual use... No simple answer, however I think the Ryzen 4000 mobile has it all over the Intel mobile right now.
Quote from: Dan EE on May 20, 2020, 18:19:59
Per page 14 of the user manual, it has two SODIMM slots with max memory of 32GB. It comes with 1 x 8GB slot filled. It has only HDMI 1.4, USB C Gen 1. The DisplayPort version is not specified and is usually 1.2 when the port is Gen 1.
It only comes with a 220Nit 45% NTSC panel. That is the show stopper for me.
Quote from: william blake on May 20, 2020, 19:12:30That is simply not true. DDR4 at best hits 3200MT/s in mobile implementations, with baseline latencies in the ~20 cycle range. LPDDR4X hits 4266MT/s, so 33% higher bandwidth (given equivalent total channel width, which Renoir offers through its choice of 2x64-bit DDR4 or 4x32-bit LPDDR4X), though with somewhat worse latency. While there are absolutely consumer workloads that are RAM latency dependent and would thus lose some performance, iGPU performance is almost entirely RAM bandwidth limited, so any increase is worth the tradeoff if that's what you're looking for. The same goes for other bandwidt-limited CPU workloads like compression/decompression. Also, the increased frequency does to a certain extent alleviate the latency disadvantage even if it doesn't erase it entirely (CAS 20 at 3200MT/s (1600MHz) = 0,0125s absolute time CAS latency vs. for example CAS 40 at 4266 MT/s (2133MHz) = 0,0188s or 33% better latency rather than the 100% it looks like from the specs).Quote from: Valantar on May 20, 2020, 13:20:44ddr4 is the fastest, low power ddr4 is the efficient.
Yeah, that's a stupid configuration that definitely leaves a lot of performance on the cutting room floor..make it LPDDR4X..
what you said..makes no sense whatsoever.
Quote from: william blake on May 20, 2020, 19:12:30Before you correct someone else you should make sure you actually know what you are talking about. Its explained in the original comment you replied to. LPDDR4X (not LPDDR4) has more bandwidth than DDR4.Quote from: Valantar on May 20, 2020, 13:20:44ddr4 is the fastest, low power ddr4 is the efficient.
Yeah, that's a stupid configuration that definitely leaves a lot of performance on the cutting room floor..make it LPDDR4X..
what you said..makes no sense whatsoever.
Quote from: Valantar on May 20, 2020, 13:20:44ddr4 is the fastest, low power ddr4 is the efficient.
Yeah, that's a stupid configuration that definitely leaves a lot of performance on the cutting room floor..make it LPDDR4X..