PCIe 5.0 devices remain scarce, but the industry never sleeps. The PCIe 6.0 spec is finalized, with devices likely a year away at best. But look out, because here comes PCI Express 7.0 right on schedule.
The PCI-SIG is holding its annual developer conference in California right now. It's the body tasked with the development of PCI Express specifications, and the group has announced a version 0.3 draft of the PCIe 7.0 spec. It remains on track to deliver the final spec in 2025, with devices to follow around 2027 at the earliest.
PCIe bandwidth doubles every generation so PCIe 7.0 will deliver a maximum data rate up to 128 GT/s. That's a whopping 8x faster than PCIe 4.0 and 4x faster than PCIe 5.0. This means PCIe 7.0 is capable of delivering up to 512GB/s of bi-directional throughput for a x16 connection and 128GB/s for an x4 connection. Imagine what that could mean for PCIe 7.0 SSDs.
Don't feel as though your rig is suddenly facing obsolescence, though. PCIe 7.0 is still years away from becoming mainstream. It's going to be much more relevant in the commercial space, at least initially. Bandwidth-hogging data centers and HPC systems are obvious targets for PCIe 7.0 and interfaces derived from it.
As far as graphics cards are concerned, you'll be fine for years to come. A PCI Express 4.0 x16 connection isn't a bottleneck for an RTX 4090, while Nvidia and AMD have no problem offering mid-range cards with x8 links. PCIe 5.0 and 6.0 cards are at least a year away.
PCIe 7.0's increased bandwidth for a given lane count means we'll see more x8 and x4 graphics cards in the future. In fact, even a PCIe 7.0 x2 link offers as much bandwidth as a PCIe 4.0 x16 link.
It'll be interesting to see what PCIe 7.0 means for future SSDs. A
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