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AMD offers EXPO for DDR5 overclocking, which will be available for both desktop and mobile platforms

It was reported in January that AMD would release a new technology called RAMP on the desktop AM5 platform, fully known as the Ryzen Accelerated Memory Profile, which will be added to the preset overclocking profile of high-end memory modules to replace A-XMP in the DDR4 memory era as a response to the Intel Alder Lake platform and its XMP 3.0.

AMD offers EXPO for DDR5 overclocking, which will be available for both desktop and mobile platforms

It is understood that EXPO will store two memory overclocking profiles for DDR5 memory, the first profile will be optimized for high bandwidth usage, and the second will focus on low latency and is optional. EXPO will contain all types of DDR5 memory, including UDIMM, RDIMM, and SO-DIMM, which means that EXPO is not limited to desktop platforms and will most likely end up on laptops at some point in time, while the current Ryzen 6000 series, code-named Rembrandt, is limited to memory in the DDR5-4800/LPDR5-6400 specifications.

AMD offers EXPO for DDR5 overclocking, which will be available for both desktop and mobile platforms

Previously, JOSEPH Tao, AMD Memory Project Manager, said at the Meet The Experts webinar that AMD's first-generation DDR5 gaming platform is Raphael (Ryzen 7000 series CPUs), which will have a big leap in overclocking and achieve speeds that may be considered unattainable. Presumably, joseph Tao's "overclocking" may refer to both the cpu core frequency based on the Zen 4 architecture and the frequency of DDR5 memory.

Joseph Tao's statement made players look forward to what AMD would do in terms of overclocking next.

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