Rambus has proudly unveiled its Mobile XDR architecture, which promises to yield mobile memory with a higher bandwidth at a lower power consumption. The technology is based on the innovations brought about by the Mobile Memory Initiative introduced last year. This architecture will supposedly enable a memory bandwidt... |
8 February 2010 08:52 GMT |
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In the wake of having its patent claims against NVIDIA denied in court, Rambus saw some favorable developments in the decision of Samsung Electronics Co. to start the manufacture of XDR DRAM memory chips. Through this development, Rambus's technology will finally begin to see more widespread availability, after ... |
4 December 2009 05:25 GMT |
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Elpida, one of the global leading suppliers of Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM), has just announced the industry's first 1-Gigabit XDR DRAM module. Based on an x32-bit configuration, the new XDR product comes to provide consumers with features that include an ultra-high speed of 7.2GHz, faster than that of an... |
20 January 2009 04:27 GMT |
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Rambus have announced that Toshiba would buy their XDR memory controller interface licence to be included in Toshiba's new generation of HDTV chipsets. The XDR memory architecture operates at 4.8 Gbps and will allow Toshiba to deliver unmatched image processing performance for their high-definition television li... |
19 December 2007 05:18 GMT |
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Elpida Memory just announced that it has begun field testing engineering samples of XDR random access memory chips that are running at an impressive 4.8GHz, over twice the speed of the fastest available DDR3 memory module that is currently available on the market.The XDR memory chips developed and manufactured by Elp... |
6 October 2007 05:31 GMT |
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Rambus is a quite small company that is developing different types of technologies and then sells or licenses them to different computer hardware producers like Intel, AMD and so on. Rambus became known a few years back, in the golden days of the Intel Pentium 4s and the AMD's Athlon XP series. Back then, there ... |
26 July 2007 06:25 GMT |
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