Eleven DRAM vendors pledge support for DDR
But Direct Rambus likely to win the day
Posted in Business, 30th November 1998 11:30 GMT
Eleven DRAM manufacturers have pledged their support for the DDR (double data rate) SDRAM standard, despite the rise and rise of Direct Rambus. Fujitsu, Hitachi, Hyundai, Big Blue, LG, Micron, Mitsubishi, NEC, Samsung, Siemens and Toshiba all said they would use the standard, which was developed by the Joint Electronic Device Engineering Council (JEDEC). And SGI said it would also develop systems using DDR. Last August, Samsung actually shipped the first of its 64Mb parts using DDR at a speed of 266MHz. Manufacturers are forced to pay royalties of around two per cent when they license Rambus technology, while DDR is a cheaper alternative. However, most PC vendors are expected to use the Direct Rambus technology because it offers vastly superior memory speeds to DDR. ®
Extended Validation
Ten Cooling Solutions to Support High-Density Server Deployment [WP42]
Stock Spam: A Classic Scam
Gartner Report: US Data Centers - The Calm Before the Storm
The Perfect (Virtual) Marriage

Netbooks and Mini-Laptops
SSL covers security embarrassments with EV figleaf
Emails show journalist rigged Wikipedia's naked shorts
Yours truly, angry mob