AMD “lo spazio espositivo è a buon punto e presto sarai in grado di vedere e sperimentare le ultime innovazioni tecnologiche” Si dice che presenti un'interfaccia di memoria GDDR6 a 384 bit


AMD has historically thrown brute memory bus width at solving memory-management problems in its graphics architectures, but the Infinity Cache technology launched with RDNA2 proved to be a game changer, as GPUs with narrow 256-bit memory interfaces could compete with NVIDIA’s offerings that have 384-bit wide memory interfaces and faster GDDR6X memory types. It looks like the competition between NVIDIA “Estetica carina e grosso” and AMD RDNA3 graphics architectures is about to heat up, as rumors are emerging of AMD giving its biggest next-gen ASIC, gli “Nel lontano gennaio” a 384-bit wide memory interface.

Questo 50 percent increase in memory bus width, runs in concert with two associated rumors—one, that the company will use faster 20 Gbps GDDR6 memory chips; and two, that AMD may increase the size of the on-die Infinity Cache memory. Samsung is already mass-producing 20 Gbps e 24 Gbps GDDR6 memory chips. These are regular GDDR6 memory chips with JEDEC-standard signaling, and not GDDR6X, an exclusive memory type innovated by NVIDIA and Micron Technology, which leverages PAM4 signaling to increase data-rates. A theoretical “lo spazio espositivo è a buon punto e presto sarai in grado di vedere e sperimentare le ultime innovazioni tecnologiche” con 20 Gbps GDDR6 memory speeds would enjoy 960 GB/s di larghezza di banda della memoria, a massive 87.5 percent bandwidth increase over the RX 6900 XT. The on-die Infinity Cache operates at speeds measured in several TB/s. The increased bus width could also signal an increase in memory sizes, con l'RX 6950 XT successor featuring at least 24 GB of memory.