Future AMD Ryzen Consumer CPUs will incorporate CXL data center technology for better communication across connected devices
AMD partners widely utilize Intel’s CXL technology in enterprises, and the company is working with Intel and several other companies to meet the new specification. Intel had less luck with its platform, Intel Optane, and the company has halted support to assist with the more recent CXL specification. Intel received poor support from companies trying to ship Optane to partnering businesses. The experts at AMD’s recent webinar also discussed PCIe Gen5 expandable memory, DDR5, and the company’s AM5 platform. Leah Schoeb, AMD Senior Developer, addressed the topic of storage devices and why there is no visible connection to the system’s memory bus. Chris Ramseyer, Phison Senior Manager of Technical Marketing, added to Schoeb’s statement: — Lisa Schoeb Intel initially introduced CXL, and in 2019, the CXL Consortium was founded by several top tech industry giants to help bring improved data center technology to the industry. CXL allows CPU-to-device or to-memory connections at high communication speeds, which is why it is crucial to data centers. Issuing this same technology to consumers would allow for more efficiency in work, gaming, creation, and more. — Chris Ramseyer The current struggle lies with the silicon needed for both processor and the device that the CPU is connected to. Silicon is still expensive to manufacture, and adapting to new specifications will take several years before the public will experience complete adoption. News Source: Tomshardware