PCI Express 4.0 is being designed with tablets in mind, according to standards-setting organization PCI Special Interest Group. The PCI-Express 4.0 bus will also go into PCs, servers and embedded devices. PCIe 4.0, will transfer data at up to 16 gigatransfers per second over copper wire. That is twice the speed of PCIe 3.0, which was finalized in late 2010 and is just reaching products.
I thought they were going to use USB3 for internal communication in tablets because pcie uses so much power.
PCI-E 4.0 has *nothing* to do with tablets.
Neither one will ever come close to pushing sufficient packets and/or pixels to saturate a PCI-E 2.0 4x link (~4GBps FD), let alone a theoretical PCI-E 4.0 16x link (~64GBps FD).
Heck, even a high-end Xeon EX (w/ ~100GBps memory bandwidth) will have a hard time saturating multiple PCI-E 4.0 8x and 16x link.
PCI-E 4.0 is designed to tackle 100Gbps networks and high-end GPGPU setups.
– Gilboa
Edited 2011-12-01 11:48 UTC
“…up to 16 gigatransfers per second…”
Can anyone tell me how many bytes are in 1 normal transfer? Can 1 normal transfer be a movie and will this allow us to send 16 billion movies per second?
Seriously, the level of articles and especialy misleading headlines is quite high this week.
“The Personal Computer Is Dead” is an article that is not even about Personal computers.
“New ARM Dev Toolkit for Android Addresses Platform ‘Hodgepodge'” had nothing to do with the “Android Hodgepodge”
and “PCI Express 4.0 Will Speed Up Tablets” … really?
This most exciting thing about PCIe 4 is the planned increase in bus power.
Less worrying about 12v rails, amps and 6-8 pin connectors. Hope it all pans out.
What tablet uses PCI-E?
The ARM powered tablets on the market all use SoC, meaning the CPU and the GPU are directly linked.
Someone correct me if I’m wrong but this makes about as much sense to me as a kitchen toaster featuring a carbon fiber knob.
So you’ve never heard of MiniPCIe or ExpressCard? There are tons of devices for these in the mobile and ITX market.