DDR6 is going to be server only for a long time maybe ever. Super expensive.
AMD could support DDR6 immediately. AMD burned in support for external memory controllers. An external memory controller can literally be whatever they define. That is the beauty of supporting an external memory controller. What they aim for is profit. Can they profit from the product? Probably not atm.
Yes, and I do expect the SOC tile for Zen6 to be updated but DDR6 for consumers is just too early for desktop.
As a consumer I certainly would welcome it. And since it does seem as Apple and Qualcomm are pushing for LPDDR6 in 2025 it does look like there's not much of a choice for marketing's sake at least for mobiles. More than anything I wish for memory expansion to at least 64 GB.
In any case, DDR6 doesn't bring much on the table other than speed bump. DDR7 will bring the more important safety features. So my bet is on DDR7 and PCIe7 being where we'll see a long term pause again. PCIe8 will likely transition toward optical.
Back on topic, in 2018 I was expecting there would be a new architecture family after Zen5, ending the Zen family.
But then Zen5 troubles apparently split and moved improvements to Zen6 on N2. I was expecting backside power delivery with N2. Now N2 and Zen6 troubles apparently split and moved improvements to Zen7 on A16. And since Zen6 is gonna be on AM5 again and likely being chocked to death by its limitation; I see little reason to believe we can expect much raw performance improvement let alone a lot of IPC gains (as already posted before ~12%).
Regardless, as far back as Zen3 it was clear to me AMD needs to improve Infinity Fabric bandwidth by 2x with each subsequent generation or the cores will be starved. And with Zen6 server CCD having 32 cores it's a must. It would be nice if that applies to consumer parts. But alas I hear AMD wants to have tons of different designs instead which likely means consumers might get a more mediocre version. Some people are already complaining about Zen5 being server centric. That's a bad incentive.
Expected improvements are ofc fixing Zen5, especially the fixed queue size schedule. A dynamic and elastic version might bring much greater throughput.
Improving the bad inter-CCD latency probably would be a greater sure thing for solid gains.
The other question people don't care as much as the industry now is AI or rather "NPU" improvement. This is mobile only ofc.
This is where I expect to see the biggest leaps to come in the next decade (100x). Hardware wise things it won't be as great but it looks reasonable to expect at least 2x or even 3-4x (as Intel claims).
Currently, the NPUs are seemingly limited to 5W. I don't expect that budget to change so any change would have to come from process node improvement. for N3->N2 ~25-30% or 10-15% speed: so NPU "IPC" would need to be 1.5x to 3x.
I see no reason for further improvements at this point because the AI/LLM will be memory limited...unless we do get support for more memory.