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Original URL: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2001/02/12/micron_launches_lowpower_sdram/

Micron launches low-power SDRAM

Dinna, dinna, dinna, dinna, dinna... BAT-RAM

By Tony Smith

Posted in Channel, 12th February 2001 17:34 GMT

Micron has announced a version of SDRAM technology aimed at mobile applications - even as fellow chip maker Infineon was doing exactly the same thing (see Infineon unveils PDA SDRAM (http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/3/16832.html)).

Micron's answer to Infineon's Mobile-RAM is called BAT-RAM, but the aim is the same: to offer a memory part tailored for the cellphone and palmtop markets.

Of the two, BAT-RAM seems the inferior. It has begun sampling at 64Mb (8MB) in 2Mb x 32 configuration, and draws either 2.5V or 3.3V. The first MRAM chips come in at 128Mb (8Mb x 16) and run at 2.5V.

Infineon's mobile memory uses a couple of power-saving features, Micron's just one: temperature compensated self-refresh, which adjusts the chip's self-refresh rate and power consumption according to its temperature. MRAM does that too - it also switches off the self-refresh individual parts of the chip.

But why this sudden burst of mobile SDRAM technologies? Simple: JEDEC is working on the spec. for a low-power DRAM chip standard, so all the contenders are shouting loudly about their offerings in the hope that JEDEC will base its standard on their technology.

Related Story

Infineon unveils PDA SDRAM (http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/3/16832.html)