DDR5 is years away still. By the time it comes out, you'll be saying "well why would they support DDR5, DDR6 is coming soon!". Right now, LPDDR4X is the best mobile memory we have right now. If AMD doesnt want to develop a new memory controller for it, fine, but only supporting 2400 MHz DDR4? You yourself admit that even at 3733 mhz these things are memory starved, so the performance difference between 2400 and 3733 is going to be significant. Why leave all that performance on the table? Hell, why bother even makig the vega 11 iGPU if it is this memory starved? It is pointless to make such a big GPU if you cant feed it.
Lack of innovation from intel does not justify AMD kneecapping their own APUs with pathetically slow memory. Ryzen 3000 can support 3200 mhz memory, and the 2000 series (which this APU is built on) support 2933 on desktop. There is no excuse for the mobile chip to be hamstrung with 2400 mhz memory. Even ryzen 1000 supported 2666 FFS! The vast majority of intel laptops out there support 2666mhz memory at a bare minimum, and more recent models are pushing closer to 3000 as standard. I understand if you only ever look at AMD laptops you'd be confused, but the rest of the world has embraced high speed memory.
Always waiting. Always next year. Always the next generation. At some point AMD needs to wake up and release a product. They already have higher speed DDR4 controllers for the very arch used in their current APUs. They should be supporting 2933 just like their desktop bretheren.
By the time "eventually" hits Intel will have their 7nm Core I series out and AMD will have lost the process node advantage. If AMD just keeps waiting, intel will catch up again (just like with athlon 64) and AMD will become a permanent also-ran for another decade. Again. The mere existance of the G7 shows intel isnt just sitting idly, they are working on an answer for AMD, and AMD should be doing everything they can to make thir mobile parts attractive to buyers, since power usage is out the window AMD should be exploiting their performance advantage, that means supporting memroy speeds from 2019, not 2015.
As I wrote before, AMD should have released the 3000 series APUs only once 7nm was ready, with rDNA chips. They would have been more competitive then these re-heated 2000 series parts are, and slotted intel as second fiddle even with 10nm G7. They will never get considerable market share if this is how they treat said market.
Ahem.
www.anandtech.com
Are you telling me those power numbers are solely due to intel's troubled 10nm arch? Reminder, MS worked with AMD to make the AMD surface, so if this is the best AMD can do, either AMD is completely incompetent or LPDDR4X has some impact, especially on idle power use where LPDDR4X pulls insignificant power compared to DDR4.