ModestGamer
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- Jun 30, 2010
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If that was really the case then why do they have prefetch units on the cpu ?
Bus speeds really aren't hurting modern CPUs. Don't believe me? look at any review that tests the difference between higher clocked ram vs lower clocked ram. The difference in just about every program is near 0. Synthetic tests are usually the only place that really sees a difference between slow and fast ram.
That isn't to say a faster memory accesses wouldn't be nice, just that they aren't a huge issue for most applications (Though, faster memory would probably introduce bigger performance increases than the switch from 32->64 bit).
That being said, the GPU has more of a memory requirements than the CPU does (Loading textures, vertices, ect), so a fastest memory WOULD give a noticeable speed increase to the GPU.
I personally think that we will see a large increase of optical interconnects (rendering bus speed concerns pretty silly. Latency still exist but that is what cache smooths out.)
Who knows though, maybe one day a tech like ZRAM, PRAM, or MRAM will take off, causing our on die cache to jump from 10MB to 128MB+. I don't, however, for see a company putting DRAM on a CPU. Latency and bus speeds aren't the biggest concerns when dealing with DRAM. DRAM itself is pretty slow. (Hence the reason DDR->DDR3 try to avoid this by trying to access several DRAM sections at once)
