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Currently and for some time to come, DDR4 is and will continue to be vastly overrated, pretty much useless and anyone buying a DDR4 system now are effectively flushing their money down the drain. That will remain true until it's properly supported by AMD, whose superior implementation of it will be amazingly awesome and make all current DDR4 owners deeply regret wasting their money and bringing such shame upon themselves and their forever-tainted enthusiast reputations.
...Seriously tho, fingers-crossed they make a new platform with DDR4, SATA-E, much improved IPC on 8+ cores, and price it to humiliate Broadwell or Skylake quads. Ugh, if Intel are still pushing expensive quads by 2016 and AMD don't have much of note, part two of my killing spree will commence!
Is there a thread somewhere on Sata-E - a new motherboard I'm getting has this but wondered what used it?!
+1 to this DDR4 atm is not worth buying you wont see much noticeable difference. Important set of words there, 'noticeable difference'.
DDR4? lol... that's last of their worries.... They should worry about making a CPU which can beat a Overclocked Sandy Bridge....
Intel doesn't support more than 8gb per dimm on mainstream platforms, AMD supports 16GB
Bandwidth is barely higher at all, we're talking marginal and not really noticeable in anything but a memory benchmark. Where as DDR2 offered massively more bandwidth compared to DDR1... the difference in DDR3 and 4 is marginal. But DDR3 2400Mhz is cheaper than DDR4 2133Mhz.
http://www.corsair.com/en-us/blog/2014/september/ddr3_vs_ddr4_synthetic
Ivy-e dual bank 59,831MB/s, Haswell-e dual bank 60,231MB/s...
That is less than 1% more bandwidth, doesn't account for improvements in the memory controller and potentially higher efficiency. It's within the margin of benchmarking error and certainly won't make noticeable performance differences at all.
Keep in mind you need 4 channels of dual bank sticks to achieve 60GB/s....
In 5 years at DDR4's peak we're probably talking 80GB/s in 4 sticks giving say 32GB of memory, a more like 16gb with single bank 4GB sticks giving 75GB/s.
A single stack of 8GB HBM will be achieving 256GB/s in under 2 years from now. 2 stacks would achieve 512GB/s, you could have 1TB/s bandwidth with 32GB using HBM.
1TB/s vs 80GB/s, one is a marginal generational increase, one is a freaking revolution in performance and what you can do with a cpu architecturally when you can back on 10 times the bandwidth.
More to the point, 1TB/s of HBM will use less power than 80GB/s of ddr4. WIth little to nothing else on the horizon 1-5% bandwidth improvements in system memory was actually interesting, when we're pretty much a few months away from the first HBM gpu's and probably 6-12 months from the first HBM using APU's...... current system memory is pretty much a joke and holds absolutely zero interest going forwards. It's rather like HDD's vs SSD's, random 4kb reads jumping from 0.5mb's to 25MB's, night and day in terms of responsiveness and performance. We're talking about extremely "last gen" product versus a magnitudes faster new gen product. HBM/HMC will entirely change ram and how CPU's use it. The sub 1% performance increase currently from same speed ddr3 vs ddr4(with even higher speed ddr3 available and has been available for a long time already don't forget) is not exciting, the roughly speaking 450% performance increase from ddr4 to HBM is just a tad more interesting. It's not an AMD or Intel thing, Intel has HMC with the performance benefits and a decent portion of the power benefits.
You've also got to remember that mainstream platforms have significantly lower bandwidth, 30,000MB/s and HBM will be the same there, no need for ultra expensive quad channel motherboards or high end cpu's to go with it. The same performance will be available on your £150 quad cores as your £900 hex/octo cores. Jumping from 30,000MB/s to 256,000MB/s using less power on mainstream platforms, that 30,250MB/s from DDR4 looks a touch less interesting.
DDR4 is total crap
Here is the best physics score for Firestrike done by Kingpin using LN2 and a massively overclocked 5960X @5775mhz and DDR4
Physics Score 27605
http://www.3dmark.com/fs/3262926
To put that in prospective, if we take a humble Haswell 4790k using DDR3 and half the cores it is possible for people using just water and a much lower oc to get half of Kingpins score.
Also the physics tests in the futuremark benches scale very well indeed with regard to the number of cores used.