TheLostSwede
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problem is all currently released GPUs are using PCIe 3.0 standards, so why the reveal that it has PCIe 4.0? Unless AMD releases a GPU that leverage the new tech, I'm all ears about it. Until then, having it now is a little pointless.
So we should stop at PCIe 3.0 and call it a day? Motherboards have always been ahead of graphics cards, be it when VL-Bus, PCI, AGP or PCI Express came out.
It's kind of how it has to work. Obviously with PCIe, we haven't had to change the physical interface for a few generations, so it has been a lot easier than in the past to transition to a new, faster version. Pointless is a very strong word in this case and you also seem to have missed the fact that there will be PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSDs coming out soon, which will reap benefits from the faster interface. How useful the extra speed will be to most people is a different matter. Also, as I mentioned elsewhere, this will allow for a single PCIe lane on 10Gbps Ethernet cards which might make them more affordable and more common.