Quote from: Bogdan Solca on January 12, 2022, 15:12:11
So DDR5 is dead on arrival too if it cost 2X more than DDR4?
The market is willing to pay for (usable) performance. But paying more for the same performance? That's a tough sell. Optane is a lot cheaper than DDR4. That's the selling pitch. You can get more space for your datasets for the same money, actually improving performance compared to having less memory. At the cost of raw performance, but traditional SDRAM is still there and acts as a cache, minimizing the practical performance hit compared to an all-SDRAM solution. That's something you need to realize. Solutions like this are aimed at machines with huge memory pools. Even DDR4 is very expensive at those capacities. And that's the very reason people keep looking at flash, be that as storage or flash-as-RAM solutions. It's such an important consideration that people are willing to sacrifice persistence. Offering something even more expensive just doesn't make that much sense, unless it has the performance to match (but that requires processors to go with it; you're not going to get paid for theoretical performance). Persistence in itself is not worth that much money. If it costs more than the sum of SDRAM and flash storage, it's just too expensive. And heterogenous approach allows you to save money by buying less RAM. You typically don't need a 1:1 ratio. If you're going for a converged, homogenous solution (RAM and storage in one), you need at least as much of it as you'd need storage in a conventional system, which is why it has to be pretty cheap. Or it can't replace storage.