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HBM is designed to feed GPUs with enormous amounts of data, reaching bandwidth in the terabytes-per-second range. That's why NVIDIA's AI systems and AMD's Instinct accelerators rely on HBM. Optane Persistent Memory was much slower. Real measurements found read latency around 374 ns and bandwidth around 38 GB/s for reads, which is probably why Optane is dead.
I think a fair comparison would have the 3DXPoint dies linked by TSVs just like HBF and HBM (for 3D NAND and DRAM dies, respectively). The cost and performance were already not good enough for the 3D XPoint by itself to support a large enough market.
The DRAM and NAND prices have gone up, but I am sure the same would go for the XPoint, which was already starting a little too high, and now lacks sufficient suppliers.
Also, the current thinking is to replace 3D XPoint with 3D SOM, but it's still under development.
HBM is designed to feed GPUs with enormous amounts of data, reaching bandwidth in the terabytes-per-second range. That's why NVIDIA's AI systems and AMD's Instinct accelerators rely on HBM. Optane Persistent Memory was much slower. Real measurements found read latency around 374 ns and bandwidth around 38 GB/s for reads, which is probably why Optane is dead.
Dan i think you are confusing HBM(High Bandwidth Memory) with HBF(High Bandwidth Flash memory) which is meant as more of like SSD replacement like Optane
High Bandwidth Flash (HBF)—a new form of NAND—delivers performance within 2.2% of unlimited-capacity HBM, while offering a significant increase in memory capacity—unlocking AI services that traditional HBM simply can’t support. Powered by Sandisk’s CBA (CMOS directly Bonded to Array)...