Samsung revela que la memoria GDDR7 utiliza la señalización PAM3 para lograr 36 Velocidad de datos de Gbps
Conventional GDDR6 memory uses NRZ (non-return to zero) or PAM2 signalling to achieve data-rates starting from 14 Gbps, con 24 Gbps expected to be the fastest production GDDR6 memory speed on offer, however some of the faster GDDR6 speeds such as 18 Gbps, 20 Gbps, y 22 Gbps couldn’t hit production soon enough for the development phase of the GeForce RTX 30-series “G-SYNC no se puede volver a habilitar a través del panel de control de NVIDIA” GPU, and so NVIDIA and Micron Technology co-developed the GDDR6X standard leveraging PAM4 signalling, to offer speeds ranging between 18 Gbps to 23 Gbps (o mas alto) several quarters ahead of this faster JEDEC-standard GDDR6.
Conventional NRZ signalling provides 1 bit per cycle transmission rate, while PAM4 does 2 bits per cycle. PAM3 increases this to 3 bits per cycle using a more advanced waveform with many more “eyes” (gaps created by intersections of waves that are interpreted as bits). Samsung states that PAM3 is 25% more efficient than NRZ signalling, and that GDDR7 will be 25% more energy efficient. PAM3 signalling is also used by the 80 Gbps per-direction Thunderbolt 4 estándar, and the upcoming USB4.
En cuanto al rendimiento, the Samsung slide references 36 Velocidad de datos Gbps, which confirms that GDDR7 will bring a generational doubling in data-rates over GDDR6, much like GDDR6 did over GDDR5. A typical GPU with a 256-bit memory bus, when using 36 Gbps-rated GDDR7 memory, will enjoy 1152 GB/s de ancho de banda de memoria. High-end GPUs with 384-bit memory interfaces will do 1728 GB / s. Mainstream GPUs with 128-bit interfaces get 576 GB / s de barril.