Originally posted by: SlowSpyder
Originally posted by: jandlecack
Originally posted by: SlowSpyderWhy do you feel backwards compatibility holds the chip back?
I'd like to think that by maintaining compatibility of the older socket as well as DDR2 RAM, something had to be sacrificed. This is evident as running the 955 on an AM3-DDR3 platform does not bring the performance gains it should compared to AM2-DDR2, but comes with the price premium.
The DDR3 memory by nature may give it some gains in synthetic benchmarks, but in real-world performance (games anyone) there is almost zero point in running it on AM3 unless you got money to burn and like to boast about running DDR3 or something.
This is probably tied to the lack of triple channel support in the CPU architecture/memory controller. Which brings me back to the compatibility issue...
It's still a very fast chip in its own right though.
My guess is they took the DDR2 controller and were able to add on to it, we really have no idea if anything had to be sacrificed. Kind of like when they went with 64 bit support, they built it on to their 32 bit chip.
I think when the transition from DDR1 to DDR2 occured, it was pretty much the same story. DDR2 didn't really offer much over DDR1. My guess is the better timings make up for the bandwidth advantage of DDR3 in a lot of situations. I'm willing to bet as DDR3 improves and as the need for more bandwidth grows DDR3 will start to seperate itself from DDR2.
AMD does lack triple channel support, but
does that make a real difference? Again, I wouldn't be suprised if this is a feature that starts to show it's true benefit down the road, but not sure how much it matters right now, or if it really makes a point that AMD had to sacrifice anything for backwards compatibility.
Just my $.02.