If AMD really wants for AM5 to live till the end of 2027, with release of Zen 6 they really should:
- make a proper IOD, add native support for CUDIMMS and higher clocks, decrease DDR5 latencies, significantly improve memory controller bandwidth;
I don't really know if Ryzen will profit as much from faster memory. Isn't it a good thing AMD isn't ad memory sensitive as Intel?
- upgrade CPU <> chipset interconnection to PCIe Gen 5 x4;
I fully agree. They could use 4 additional lanes from the CPU for Gen4x8 or Gen5x8, but that would limit available lanes even more-
- make USB 4.0 support chipset-bound, don't hang it onto CPU lanes and stop crippling CPU-bound PCIe lanes;
No, put USB4 into the IOD. It already is in Phoenix/Hawk Point and Strix Point. Sadly, only one B650E mainboard from Gigabyte supports using USB4 from CPU.
- add at least 2 more cores per CCD while retaining similar CCD TDP to 8 cores per CCD;
I don't think you just add 2 Cores, you probably only can double core count to 16.
- bring back PCIe ports, since they are versatile, specify for motherboard makers to have more than just two expansion slots (1x PCIe 5.0 x16 + 2x PCIe 4.0 x4 + 1x PCIe 4.0 x 4 is ideal);
You mean offer more PCIe lanes so motherboard makers are able to offe more PCIe-slots. AMD can't force them to put those lanes into PCIe-slots. That being said, sadly, M.2 and gigantic GPU-coolers are killing space for PCIe-slots.
- lower native SATA ports, 2 are enough, I'd even prefer motherboards with no SATA support at all (PCIe ports can be converted into SATA ports with adaptor).
- Dissagree, I want 6xSATA back.
Not exactly. AM3 was PhenomII only, so you really could only use one or let's 1 and 1/2 gens. It started with Phenom II X4 955 BE, which got to 980 over the years with a better stepping, and latter addes sixcore PhenomII X6 1090T and 1100T BE. That's it, all 45nm, all the same tech, just more clock (+500MHz) and more cores. Everything else you could put in there ware slower, had less cores and cache or was older. Allthough you could put all those CPU into AM2+, too.
For Bulldozer, you needed AM3+. There were new revisions of old AM3-boards, looking the same, except the colour of the socket, put you couldn't plug a Bulldozer-CPU into an pre-Bulldozer AM3-board. 970/990X/990FX-chipset was the same as 870/790F/890FX.
AM2 had a long life only in theory, too. With the right board, like many Asus and Gigabyte, you could upgrade from Athlon64 90nm F2-Stepping to PhenomII X4 45nm up to 95W (meaning 945 or 955 non BE). In reality, most board never got the needed BIOS-update, some boards from cheap manufacturers like ECS and Biostar didn't even get Athlon64 in 65nm.
But with the right Board, you could upgrade your P965- or i975X-board from the first 65nm Core 2 Duo "Conroe" up to the latest 45nm Core 2 Quad "Yorkfield" and stay superior to AMD the whole AM2, AM2+ and AM3-era. With the wrong board from the wrong manufacturer or with a nForce-chipset, you had to change board for FSB1333 and again for 45nm.
I made the mistake and bought a Abit KN9 Ultra with nForce 570 Ultra in fall of 2006. It never got a Phenom-BIOS because Abit went out of business, so I only got to Athlon64 X2 5400+ BE. Furthermore, it was a bad overclocker, so I only got my X2 3800+ to 2,7GHz instead of ~3GHz and my 5400+ to just 3,1GHz, but as a poor student, it had to soldier on until I got a Z87-board with 5670K in 2013.
Had I bought a Asus M2N-E or Gigabyte GA-M57SLI-(D)S4, I would have been able to upgrade to PhenomII X4 955. Or would I have bought an ASUS P965 (which would have been more expensive), I would have been able to upgrade to Core 2 Quad 9650 and OC that.