It feels like the BIOS/UEFI software vendors haven't really updated the "First Time RAM Initialization" routine to use all the available hardware on the PC.
We're coming upon the age of 24 GB / 48 GB DIMM sticks being common with DDR5.
Consumer RAM/System Memory capacities are only going to get larger with time.
Not to mention (Enterprise/Server) level "RAM/System Memory" capacities are getting ever larger with longer "First Boot Cycles".
NOTE: " I could be very wrong on this aspect ", that the BIOS/UEFI only counts/initializes RAM in a Single-Threaded mode and doesn't use all available Cores on a Multi-Core CPU setup.
Does anybody know IF the Initial "First Boot RAM Initialization" utilizes all available cores on the CPU to count the total available memory in parallel for a faster initial Boot sequence?
We're coming upon the age of 24 GB / 48 GB DIMM sticks being common with DDR5.
Consumer RAM/System Memory capacities are only going to get larger with time.
Not to mention (Enterprise/Server) level "RAM/System Memory" capacities are getting ever larger with longer "First Boot Cycles".
NOTE: " I could be very wrong on this aspect ", that the BIOS/UEFI only counts/initializes RAM in a Single-Threaded mode and doesn't use all available Cores on a Multi-Core CPU setup.
Does anybody know IF the Initial "First Boot RAM Initialization" utilizes all available cores on the CPU to count the total available memory in parallel for a faster initial Boot sequence?