IT Home February 5th News, a source Gray (@Olrak29_) just stated on the X platform that AMD’s next-generation Ryzen AI Max platform based on the “Zen 6” microarchitecture — the “Medusa Halo” processor will support LPDDR6 memory.
As a high-end APU that pursues powerful graphics performance, “Medusa Halo” requires a large amount of memory bandwidth to “feed” the integrated graphics unit, and LPDDR6 supports higher memory transfer rates compared to LPDDR5x, making it one of the good ways to resolve potential bandwidth bottlenecks.
Qualcomm’s upcoming SM8975 chip, scheduled to launch later this year, will be among the first mobile chips to support LPDDR6 memory, and “Medusa Halo” is expected to be one of the earliest x86 processors compatible with LPDDR6.
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AMD "Medusa Halo" processor is reported to support LPDDR6 memory.
IT Home February 5th News, a source Gray (@Olrak29_) just stated on the X platform that AMD’s next-generation Ryzen AI Max platform based on the “Zen 6” microarchitecture — the “Medusa Halo” processor will support LPDDR6 memory.
As a high-end APU that pursues powerful graphics performance, “Medusa Halo” requires a large amount of memory bandwidth to “feed” the integrated graphics unit, and LPDDR6 supports higher memory transfer rates compared to LPDDR5x, making it one of the good ways to resolve potential bandwidth bottlenecks.
Qualcomm’s upcoming SM8975 chip, scheduled to launch later this year, will be among the first mobile chips to support LPDDR6 memory, and “Medusa Halo” is expected to be one of the earliest x86 processors compatible with LPDDR6.