Friday, December 4th 2020

ASRock Implements CAM (Clever Access Memory) on Intel Z490 Taichi Motherboard

ASRock has released a BIOS update for their Z490 Taichi motherboard which implements a Clever Access Memory (CAM) system (might I say that's as clever as it sounds?) CAM is basically ASRock's own marketing push based on AMD's SAM, which is in itself a marketing push based on PCIe's Resizable BAR feature (the amount of marketing names employed to describe the same set of features is becoming mind-boggling). The feature is available through the 1.72 BETA Bios for the Z490 Taichi motherboard, and WCCFTech ran some quick and dirty tests on a Z490-based system with an AMD Radeon RX 6800 XT graphics card to verify what (if any) performance differences arose.

The tests were done at 4K resolution for Shadows of the Tomb Raider and Assassin's Creed: Valhalla, running on an Intel Core i7-10700K processor and 2x 8 GB sticks of DDR4-2666 memory. The results? 3.32% performance improvement under Shadows of the Tomb Raider, and an impressive 11.54% improvement for Assassin's Creed: Valhalla (images to the left feature CAM on, and images on the right show CAM off). It seems it's only a matter of time until this amazing feature that's been available (yet untapped) for years now brings some very considerable and widespread performance improvements to users independent of platform. Kinda like finding a $10 bill in an old pair of jeans.
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32 Comments on ASRock Implements CAM (Clever Access Memory) on Intel Z490 Taichi Motherboard

#26
Hattu
NoJuan999Yes it was used to allow the PC to run at 33 MHz instead of the stock 66 MHz as needed.
I had a 486 PC that ran at 66 MHz when the Turbo was "on" and 33 MHz when it was "off".
There was even a display that showed as 33 or 66.
So for my PC, Turbo"On" equaled the full speed.
Just like it states here:
What Was the Turbo Button on Old PCs for? | ITIGIC
You're one generation ahead. Lol. Many old 386 had those buttons. Can't remember were there turbo on 286 as well.
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#27
NoJuan999
HattuYou're one generation ahead. Lol. Many old 386 had those buttons. Can't remember were there turbo on 286 as well.
LOL
Yeah I had a 386 before the 486 and I can't remember if it had a Turbo button or not.
I only remember the 486 had one because of the digital display it had showing 33 or 66.
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#29
lukart
Love how they always go against the rules :D
They always seem to find a way around the Intel and AMD locks.
Posted on Reply
#30
AteXIleR
Release the final enhanced BIOS later on the other High-Tier models for both to the Z490 and the Z390 series.
That would be a fair thing to do if it has already been done on this model.
Posted on Reply
#31
lesp4ul
no love for z390 extreme 4?
Posted on Reply
#32
chrcoluk
The question is how far back will it be backported, as manufacturers prefer people to pay for new hardware to get new software features.
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