- Feb 4, 2012
- 18
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Pardon if this has been done ad absurdum. But I've seen so many recent references to the "memory gap" that I had to whip up a pocket calculator. Maybe we can set a timeline, or even better, draw a graph for the "memory gap". (No, not last night, but RAM B/W contra CPU powah.)
I had a nice Athlon rig that was 750 @ 1000. (OK, it was really 850 when naked. Those were the days.) It had single-channel PC133 memory. Let's make this a 7.5 ratio for the sake of conversation. Now I have a rig at 3000 that has triple-channel 1600 memory. That's like a 6.25 ratio. (The CPU is possibly more effective at caching and using what it gets.) So... Does the memory gap keep growing? No doubt quad-channel is around the corner, and I mean already lurking there.
(And don't give me any of that old stuff about "dual-pumped" or "rising and falling edges". The databus speed is really what it is. Clock triggering is a minor detail.)
?Que?
Edit: Sweet Jebus I'm an idiot, I temporarily forgot multicore. And next I noticed I can't count. Aiiigh. Interesting to see the replies though. I shan't retract my bad.
I had a nice Athlon rig that was 750 @ 1000. (OK, it was really 850 when naked. Those were the days.) It had single-channel PC133 memory. Let's make this a 7.5 ratio for the sake of conversation. Now I have a rig at 3000 that has triple-channel 1600 memory. That's like a 6.25 ratio. (The CPU is possibly more effective at caching and using what it gets.) So... Does the memory gap keep growing? No doubt quad-channel is around the corner, and I mean already lurking there.
(And don't give me any of that old stuff about "dual-pumped" or "rising and falling edges". The databus speed is really what it is. Clock triggering is a minor detail.)
?Que?
Edit: Sweet Jebus I'm an idiot, I temporarily forgot multicore. And next I noticed I can't count. Aiiigh. Interesting to see the replies though. I shan't retract my bad.
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