Thursday, March 14th 2024
ASUS Intel 700, 600 Series and AMD AM5 Motherboards Are Ready to Support up to 256 GB of DDR5 Memory
ASUS today announced BIOS updates that enable support for up to 256 GB of memory on its Intel 700 and 600 series motherboards that use DDR5 modules. Such models with four DIMM slots can now support up to 256 GB of memory, while such models with two DIMM slots can now support up to 128 GB. These enhancements significantly improve multitasking potential, ensuring smooth and seamless computing. AMD AM5 motherboards from ASUS do not require a BIOS update to enable support for up to 256 GB of DDR5 memory modules.
The BIOS updates can be accessed on the ASUS support pages for the models listed below.
Source:
ASUS
The BIOS updates can be accessed on the ASUS support pages for the models listed below.
14 Comments on ASUS Intel 700, 600 Series and AMD AM5 Motherboards Are Ready to Support up to 256 GB of DDR5 Memory
These BIOS updates are available for like a month, did they just figured out that this BIOS build also supports 256GB of RAM?
All I could find at local retailers were RDIMMs, which are not physically compatible with mainstream UDIMMs.
Maybe motherboard vendors weren't able to test 64GB UDIMMs until now?
Samsung pretty much does not exist in the gaming/consumer DDR5 anymore. They had some ICs with some early product issues and disappeared. Most "gaming" RAM kits use the same 3-4 ICs for long months. Most are Hynix, and some are Micron.
I own both a Z690 and a Z790 Creator and they both had similar BIOS builds close to each other, and yes, these builds are not new
hell, there's even a brand new BETA around if you're looking for it
Depending on the size of the leak, that may only buy you so much extra time…
While I'm not an Adobe user myself, (some of) this may actually be a memory fragmentation issue rather than a leak, which can get quite severe if applications are running for weeks or even months. And if so, the memory footprint will not only grow, but the application will be gradually slowed down to a crawl.
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As to the usefulness of 64 GB modules on a mainstream platform, I think it will be very niche. Since the bandwidth is unchanged, this will be mostly useful for users who have a lot allocated, but not necessarily used at the same time, like e.g. someone using a "workstation" for different purposes like development, simulations, CAD/modelling or video/picture editing (without closing down applications between different tasks).
One exception though would be Linux users, where the OS will use any free memory to cache drive reads, so basically like a dynamic RAM drive.
But the price of this memory is not likely to be cheap…
That's why I said it was mostly useful for those switching between tasks, as those who needs it simultaneously probably should go for a 4 or 8 channel "HEDT" setup.