I’ve seen some discussion of this but I wanted to ask. Wikipedia seems to indicate that SoC “almost always includes” system memory.
I’ve seen some discussion of this but I wanted to ask. Wikipedia seems to indicate that SoC “almost always includes” system memory.
I wouldn't rely on Wikipedia for anything more than information on a pop culture reference.
I also shouldn’t rely on forum postings, but this is as low stakes as a pop culture reference for my purposes ( if you were a journalist you shouldn’t rely on Wikipedia as a primary source for a pop culture reference either, if we really need to resolve and drill down on this further).
actually disagree a bit. Wikipedia is amazing
Don’t disagree, it’s very simple that it shouldn’t be a primary source if something is at stake.
I’ve seen some discussion of this but I wanted to ask. Wikipedia seems to indicate that SoC “almost always includes” system memory.
I’ve seen some discussion of this but I wanted to ask. Wikipedia seems to indicate that SoC “almost always includes” system memory.
All their existing A-series SoCs includes the RAM.
"The A13 Bionic has an Apple part number APL1W85. It is a Package on Package (PoP) with both the A13 Application Processor and the Samsung K3UH5H50AM-SGCL 4GB LPDDR4X SDRAM, with the same 4GB DRAM capacity as the previous iPhone XS Max from last year."
It is possible that Apple will not place all the RAM on the SoC but I have always though that all the RAM will be included, especially since they said the CPU and GPU will share memory.
All their existing A-series SoCs includes the RAM.
"The A13 Bionic has an Apple part number APL1W85. It is a Package on Package (PoP) with both the A13 Application Processor and the Samsung K3UH5H50AM-SGCL 4GB LPDDR4X SDRAM, with the same 4GB DRAM capacity as the previous iPhone Xs Max from last year."
Apple iPhone 11 Pro Max Teardown | TechInsights
Posted: September 23, 2019 - Updated: October 1, 2019 Contributing Authors: Daniel Yang, Stacy Wegner, Albert Cowskywww.techinsights.com
It is possible that Apple will not place all the RAM on the SoC but I have always though that all the RAM will be included, especially since they said the CPU and GPU will share memory.
All their existing A-series SoCs includes the RAM.
"The A13 Bionic has an Apple part number APL1W85. It is a Package on Package (PoP) with both the A13 Application Processor and the Samsung K3UH5H50AM-SGCL 4GB LPDDR4X SDRAM, with the same 4GB DRAM capacity as the previous iPhone Xs Max from last year."
Apple iPhone 11 Pro Max Teardown | TechInsights
Posted: September 23, 2019 - Updated: October 1, 2019 Contributing Authors: Daniel Yang, Stacy Wegner, Albert Cowskywww.techinsights.com
It is possible that Apple will not place all the RAM on the SoC but I have always though that all the RAM will be included, especially since they said the CPU and GPU will share memory.
If they do put RAM on the SoC, it will be interesting to see how it's set up as channels/bit widths.
Could even do a triple-channel controller with the one channel allocated to onboard and the other two external. Upgrading RAM then gives you more capacity and bandwidth.
The iFixit teardown of the iPad Pro 11 shows the RAM (in that case 4GB) was on the chip in the form of two 2GB modules. The 6GB version is the same except it is two 3 GB modules. That makes me suspect the DTX likewise has the RAM on chip in the form of two 8GB modules.
It’s not on chip, it’s next to the chip. The SoC and RAM are physically separate entities.
This is an interesting overview about Apple’s packaging: https://sst.semiconductor-digest.co.../01/16/the-packaging-of-apples-a12x-is-weird/
This article actually shows that Apple is putting its RAM in a highly unusual place - on the same substrate as the SoC. In fact it is literally in the same logic board socket as the SoC - in essence it is horizontally stacked and gets Apple the lowest possible delay in memory to processor exchanges.
Apple will incorporate the first 16GB of RAM on the SoC. Any more RAM being optioned gets soldered to the logic board.
Apple has been soldering the SSD flash chips onto the logic boards for a few years now, except for the Mac Pro.
well, lowest *possible* would most likely be vertical stacking.
A very handsome guy I know wrote about that a long time ago in his ph.d dissertation (https://www.ecse.rpi.edu/frisc/theses/MaierThesis/ - see chapter 5, under “future packaging.”)
I could be misinterpreting but if you read the quoted link
The Packaging of Apple’s A12X is… Weird | Siliconica
sst.semiconductor-digest.com
it implies the DRAM packages are 16GB dies so Apple could already do 32GB "on-board" at least as far as their SoC packaging is concerned, as far back as 2018. Don't forget they've likely been working on the Mac SoCs for longer than everyone is assuming.
I'm guessing they are side by side for thinness and cooling purposes. Might not be an issue in a Mac but not necessarily worth the gains to build two different packages.