Something tells me it is not just drivers that suck here. The drivers are bad for sure but maybe this Arch is just really bad product. If Intel wishes to stay in the dGPU market they really need to buckle up and refine the architecture and make some improvements while they work on the drivers.
The whole story sounds like a project management failure with unrealistic scoping and aims.
They had DG1 based on iGPU to test drivers.
Someone pushed through the fabbing of Alchemist against inside Intel opposition.
It seems DG2 should have been a test bed, not a full range launch even if the yarns being spun to the tech press are true.
There's holes in the story and what they have said undermines confidence if you have development experience.
Lying to cover up wasting hundreds of millions of dollars is a plausible explanation of an ambitious product rushing to market fueled by hubris and personal ambitions.
Intel are new player here and already give a middle finger to legacy platform.
Well they didn't say they needed Re-BAR until they had the problem with Alchemist reviews in China
Yeah, I assume this will be a tricky one for Intel to fix. BAR optimization can introduce so many obscure bugs. It's no big deal with newer hardware, but a GPU like the A380 is definitely something I would use on an older machine which will not support this feature.
I've used SAM without needing it off, from what I can see AMD white/black listing of titles means it works great. I know Nvidia appeared to be less committed, which justifies the SAM validation and feature marketing.
Now Intel Tom & Ryan need to explain the strategy they had to have older unmaintained game VRAM management code re-written.
AMD would have had developer feedback about the pain of apertures compared to a unified address space, but PCIE is optimised for 32bit addresses and the 64bit transition had OSes use compatibility hacks to minimise trouble with devices using physical addresses on 64bit OS.
So SAM was messing with the status quo, VRAM doesn't fit in 32bit and AMD could try it out on their platform taking advantage of controlling BIOS and all driver software involved.