My biggest gripe with current PCs is excessive power consumption. Second to that is the heat generated by NVMe SSDs. A motherboard with an acre of metal covering half the board, or SSDs cooled by tower heatsinks with tiny fans is just not what I want to see. It's not like Gen 5 x4 SSDs deliver tangible performance improvements anyway.
That's why the news (via Tom's Hardware) of Intel's efforts to create a bandwidth controller driver to address these issues is concerning. This driver has been developed for Linux users with the aim of controlling thermal issues inherent to high bandwidth PCIe devices by reducing PCIe link speed when necessary.
Phoronix reports the driver should incorporate a mechanism to reduce the link width of PCIe Gen 6 devices. So, a Gen 6 x4 drive could reduce to x2 or x1 when the system detects excessively high temperatures. The changelog indicates changes to link width in this way is not possible with Gen 5 devices.
The driver itself is actually a good idea. I like the idea of dynamic throttling under the right circumstances, but that we need it at all is what's concerning. A fast Gen 5 drive that can hit 14 GB/s can easily throttle if not cooled appropriately. I shudder to think what kind of cooling a top spec Gen 6 drive will require. Maybe we'll see more AIO's with integrated M.2 cooling blocks.
Best SSD for gaming: The best speedy storage today.
Best NVMe SSD: Compact M.2 drives.
Best external hard drives: Huge capacities for less.
Best external SSDs: Plug-in storage upgrades.
For now, the driver is for Linux only, leaving questions about how or if such a driver could make it to the Windows ecosystem. It shouldn't be too hard to develop. If Gen 6 devices really are nuclear, the SSD industry, Intel, AMD, Microsoft and laptop manufacturers should be able to put their heads together and make something like this work.
I'd like to see a move away from typical x4 drives to more x2 or x1 drives. A Gen 6 x1 drive will still be able to transfer at
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