This article is more than 1 year old

Rambus offers DDR controller cores

DDR, GDDR and - surprise - XDR support

Rambus yesterday began shipping a series of DDR SDRAM memory controller designs pitched a chip designers who want to build the technology into their own processor cores.

In addition to DDR, the Rambus "interface and physical layer cells" support DDR 2 up to 800MHz, along with GDDR 1, 2 and 3 at up to 1.6GHz.

Crucially, the technology also works with Rambus' own would-be next-generation memory standard, XDR DRAM, courtesy of "an optional performance mode". So by buying Rambus IP now, chip designers are inherently paving the way to support the next major standard - if Rambus gets its way, of course.

Rambus said its DDR interface circuits are designed for a wide variety of standard CMOS processes, including 90nm, 130nm and 180nm nodes. The company can ship you designs today if you're a customer of TSMC's 130nm process. Rambus DDR memory controller interfaces for consumer and graphics applications are available now, the company said, while those for main memory applications will be available "soon". ®

Related stories

Rambus sues for $1bn
FTC outlines appeal against Rambus ruling
FTC appeals against Rambus ruling
Judge throws out FTC case against Rambus
Europe to revoke Rambus memory patent
SiS unveils 16GB quad-channel Rambus chipset
Rambus renames Yellowstone as XDR DRAM

More about

TIP US OFF

Send us news


Other stories you might like