Monday, April 18th 2022

Dell Will Have Custom DDR5 Memory Module for its Upcoming Laptops

A leak with details about upcoming Dell notebooks has revealed that Dell's upcoming notebooks with DDR5 memory will feature a custom memory module that Dell calls CAMM, or Compression Attached Memory Module. The CAMM can support up to 128 GB RAM according to the leak and initial modules will support memory speeds of 4800 MHz. It's unclear if notebooks with CAMM support will have soldered down memory as well, but what is clear is that Dell is not looking at using traditional SO-DIMM type modules.

The first notebooks from Dell to feature the new module appears to be the Precision 7-series, which will also feature an Intel 55 W Alder Lake-HX series CPU, a choice of an NVIDIA RTX A5000 GPU or Intel Arc DG2 based graphics with a 90 W TDP, as well as up to 12 TB of NVMe storage over PCIe 4.0. Apparently Dell has developed what it calls DGFF or Dell Graphics Form Factor for these laptops, which suggests that they'll feature some kind of modular graphics solution. Considering that at least some models in Precision 7-series will sport 16-inch displays, there should be plenty of space for a GPU module, although it'll be interesting to see exactly what Dell is bringing to the table that's new here.
Sources: @Emerald_x86, via Videocardz
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76 Comments on Dell Will Have Custom DDR5 Memory Module for its Upcoming Laptops

#76
Chrispy_
kanecvrWhat are you even talking about? I never mentioned anything about being plugged in. And being plugged in has noting to do with it.

I've tried thin and light machines - anything from ultra low power 15W i7's to the 14" 8 core Asus ROG Zephirus - compared to a workstation or gaming laptop performance is a noticeably reduced. Even in the case of "performance" (notice the quotes) oriented t&l machines, there is simply not enough thermal headroom and power circuitry to enable any serious computing*.

I'll give an example - take the HP x360 - at 15W ryzen 3750h will perform significantly worse then the same CPU but with a higher power limit - 65W like in the Asus TUF gaming. You can add as much ram to that as you want, it's still a dumpster fire.

*And by serious computing I'm talking rendering, compiling and so on - tasks that would benefit from having large amounts of ram. I've seen this kind of talk back in the 2000's - MORE RAM IZ MOAR POWR!!!! - marketing BS designed to make people pay for stuff they don't need. For every day computing 8GB is more then enough. In fact, the PC I use to study and write research papers on is an ancient i7 950 with only 6GB of ram, and it's excellent. Not even having dozens of tabs in edge open at the same time while doing image optimization and OCR in Acrobat DC will slow it down. I've been thinking of upgrading this PC as it's been in use since my collage days, but it's been running so well for the tasks it's expected to do that I feel no need to do so, and it has all the software I'm used to on it, as well as all my research papers and materials from studies and whatnot, so instead of throwing more ram at it or swapping it out for a newer gen machine I simply installed a PCI-E USB 3.1 card and upgraded the CPU cooler.

I brought this PC up because it has about the same performance level as a modern quad core thin and light laptop running a modern i5 or ryzen 5 "U" skew CPU - and 6Gb is not a hindrance. It it were I would have dug into my box 'o' ram and installed an additional 6 GB.

Also I formulated my reply as a serious valid QUESTION - what do you need that much ram for? I'm still waiting for an answer. I gave you a practical example of using 6Gb in 2022 for Acrobat DC, image recognition, OCR, photoshop, document digitalization and on line research (witch often involves having over 50 open browser tabs or multiple browser instances running at the same time) with no slowdowns or other issues.
LOL did you seriously just go on a huge rant because you think that people who only have a laptop shouldn't do serious CAD/media/protoyping/database work, and MUST get a desktop instead!? We all know you can run Microsoft word on an old PC with 6GB of RAM just fine. That's not what this discussion is about at all though...

I don't think I need to dignify that with a serious response, but if you don't need more than 16GB of RAM, good for you - you're now exempt from the rest of this discussion because the topic in question doesn't apply to you.
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