Looks like we're on the same page then.
I'd say the boost was more significant due to these three pressures:
- Caches on CPUs were smaller and slower leading to the core being starved more often
- The memory technologies were much slower than what we have today. It's easy to be wowed by gains at the low end of a technology like with CPUs in the Pentium/Pentium II days because it's a lot easier to notice. Remember being impressed by CPU upgrades back then in terms of how much faster a system felt? That just doesn't really happen anymore since the CPUs of yesteryear are already so fast for general purpose activities. Same concept.
- The gains were larger, too, due to a switch from SDR to DDR signaling. That alone gets you a virtually free doubling of throughput at the same frequency without sacrificing latency. We don't get to do that again since we're already using it. We can add more phases of clock cycles, but QDR is about the practical limit.






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