Wednesday, July 19th 2023

Next-gen AM5 Motherboard Platforms Could Support USB4
AMD's CEO Lisa Su is reported to be visiting a number of companies in Taiwan this week—one of her objectives seems to be getting next generation AM5 desktop platforms prepped with USB4 support. Hardware news site MyDrivers believes that Asmedia played host to Team Red's leader at some point—this is a significant development given that this Taiwanese company specializes in making motherboard chipsets and USB controllers, although Su has allegedly met with other competing firms. Asmedia is reported to be a market leader in terms of implementing the latest USB4 tech, with certification awarded by the USB-IF Association.
Prior leaks have implied that the two companies are already involved with each other on a separate project—their collective goal being Thunderbolt 4 support on next-gen AMD platforms. The timing of this trip to Taiwan suggests that forthcoming AM5 motherboards offering USB4 support could be lined up for launch next year, alongside the "Zen 5" Ryzen 8000 CPU series. Boards based on current gen A620, B650 and X670 chipsets could be refreshed with the latest USB connectivity standard.
Sources:
My Drivers, Wccftech
Prior leaks have implied that the two companies are already involved with each other on a separate project—their collective goal being Thunderbolt 4 support on next-gen AMD platforms. The timing of this trip to Taiwan suggests that forthcoming AM5 motherboards offering USB4 support could be lined up for launch next year, alongside the "Zen 5" Ryzen 8000 CPU series. Boards based on current gen A620, B650 and X670 chipsets could be refreshed with the latest USB connectivity standard.
121 Comments on Next-gen AM5 Motherboard Platforms Could Support USB4
Next gen chipset link will only have x4 Gen5 speed when AsMedia redevelops Promo21 chipset and upgrades it to x4 Gen5. This may take more than one year form now, as it needs to be tested and certified by USB-IF. The issue with this is that there are still four physical PCIe lanes of traffic, no matter which generation of PCIe data run through it. Intel has eight lanes on DMI and it's more flexible for upgrades. AMD needs to upgrade the chipset link on desktop to x8 lanes. They have this already on TR system.
If NVMe SSD is a primary drive with OS, then data run through it at all times and this generates heat. On the chipset link side, the lanes are not utilised fully at all times, depending on which peripherals are engaged in traffic, so there is relatively less heat in this area.
Either way, cool to see some boards validated early-ish on, though not unexpected, I believe Asrock is usually very good about ECC support
I have thought for sometime that the best option would be a total overhaul the ATX standard, just effecting the motherboard layout and case standards, leaving everything else as is. A large part of today's problems come from the GPU cooler often being larger than the CPU cooler, and being badly positioned from the perspective of cooling. I have some plans, and even tried to (repeatedly) contact GamersNexus when they announced they were looking for plans as they were working with a case manufacturer for a new product. I never heard back.!!!
I might want to see if a patent is a real-world option before I discuss anything here, no offence. If someone is reading this from a company that makes cases, or sells cases made by an OEM, feel free to contact me.
In terms of PCIe connectivity, that's about the best you could squeeze out from X670E platform; quite decent actually. They are busy, of course. Keep trying and don't give up. I went for 15 interviews before I got my job...
Try to check the online store of a memory manufacturer like Crucial, for reference, they're about the same price on the Crucial online store for the same capacity, rank, speed and latency (and yes, they're slow AF but that's ecc modules for you, you're not buying them for the speed - when DDR5 is more mature there will be faster ECC modules but that's not today)
www.crucial.com/memory/server-ddr5/mtc10f1084s1rc48br
www.crucial.com/memory/server-ddr5/mtc10c1084s1ec48br
Intel has ECC on workstation platforms, now including the regular core series processors if you spring the extra money for a W680 motherboard (which is absurd since the memory controller is in the cpu but that's segmentation for you :facepalm:) Yes, threadripper pro does and I believe saphire rapids does to, certainly not at the same time of course but they're compatible with both
This discussion has led me to a positive upgrade, and not just for this system, but for then next one in line that will get its (two 16G DIMM's).
Crucial part number MTA9ASF2G72AZ-3G2R
Now, it is ready for prime time and it will feature in many X770 and some B750 boards.
As ragards to 10 GbE, this is not going to happen any time soon on a larger scale. Forget about it. Not needed for most users.
External WAN ports on routers bring mostly up to 1 Gbps, as hardly any internet provider offers anything above that.
Internally, on home devices, this depends on needs. Most 4K TVs and AVRs still have 100 Mbps LAN port, so there is that.
2.5 Gbps ports has become a standard on all B650 and X670 boards, to connect to NAS, switches, etc.
In next 5 years, those ports will move to 5 Gbps, and more higher end boards will have 10 Gbps, not just halo models.
Arrow Lake motherboards and other devices with Thunderbolt 5 ports will support 20 Gbps network traffic. You need to know which board to buy. I have Asus ProArt B550 with two Thunderbolt 4 ports, both 40 Gbps, exactly for fast SSDs. Several AM5 boards from Asrock and Asus also have TB4/USB4 ports. AMS4242 host controller was not ready for AM5 release. It is ready now and it will come with next chipset.