Elpida, Toshiba claim world's fastest DRAMs based on the XDR memory interface technology from Rambus Inc
Mark LaPedus
(03/30/2005 11:51 AM EST)
SAN JOSE, Calif. — Japan's Elpida Memory Inc. and Toshiba Corp. on Wednesday (March 30) separately claimed to have rolled out the world's fastest DRAMs, based on the XDR memory interface technology from Rambus Inc.
The 512-megabit XDR DRAM devices from the companies each operate at 3.2-GHz, providing what they claim is an industry-leading data transfer rate of 6.4-gigabytes-per-second.
XDR DRAM is geared for high-end applications, such as digital televisions and home servers. It is based on the XDR memory interface technology developed by Rambus (Los Altos, Calif.)
In 2003, Rambus rolled out XDR, formerly known as Yellowstone. XDR, which stands for extreme data rate, will be initially targeted for consumer electronics and graphics applications. Rambus hopes to also position the technology for PC main memory, competing with industry-standard double-data-rate architectures.
Many observers doubt that the technology will succeed for main PC memory, but there appears to be some niche markets for XDR. And Elpida and Toshiba are racing each other to the market.
"Toshiba has been playing a leadership role in realizing XDR DRAM technology," said Shozo Saito, vice president of memory division at Toshiba (Tokyo), in a statement. "We were first in the world to sample first generation XDR DRAM in December 2003. We plan to mass-produce our second generation 512-megabit XDR DRAMs in the second half of 2005 to secure our leading position in this business area."
Toshiba is sampling the product right now. The 1.8-Volt device comes in a 4-megabit word x 8-bank x 16-bit configuration. Housed in a 1.27- x 0.8-mm pitch BGA package, the device has a maximum data rate of 4.8-GHz and a minimum cycle time of 40-ns.
Like Toshiba, Elpida sees a big market for XDR. "Industry demand for memory bandwidth in next-generation digital consumer electronics such as high-definition digital television and 3-D graphics applications is growing rapidly as more content becomes available and as processor performance becomes more robust," said Jun Kitano, director of technical marketing for Elpida Memory (USA), in a statement.
"Elpida believes that XDR memory has tremendous potential in a wide variety of multimedia applications," he said.
Elpida's part is similar to that of Toshiba. Its new devices are manufactured using Elpida's 0.10-micron process technology and are available in 104-pin FBGA packages. Elpida's 512-Mbitt XDR DRAM device is currently sampling to customers. Volume production is expected in the second half of 2005.
Related Semiconductor IP
- 1.6T Ultra Ethernet Controller
- Chiplet Die-to-Die Interconnect IP Solution
- High speed MACsec Engine 100G/200G/400G/800G/1.6T
- Temperature/Voltage sensors
- AMBA Bus Host to eSPI Controller/Target
Related News
- Elpida Introduces The World's Fastest DRAM Based On The Rambus XDR Memory Architecture
- Rambus Expands Industry-Leading Memory Interface Chip Offering to High-Performance PCs with DDR5 Client Clock Driver
- Rambus, Toshiba and Elpida Announce XDR DRAM, the World's Fastest Memory
- Rambus to Demonstrate the World's Fastest Memory Device at Intel Developer Forum; New XDR DRAMs from Toshiba and Samsung Provide 8x the Bandwidth of Today's Main Memory
Latest News
- Imec unlocks fourfold UWB range extension using world-first narrowband receiver chip compliant with IEEE 802.15.4ab standard
- Alliance for Open Media Releases AV2 Codec, Advancing Next-Generation Open Video Coding
- VeriSilicon Drives Commercial Adoption of AV2 Across Next-Generation Video and Streaming Applications
- Cadence Announces Collaboration with Intel Foundry to Accelerate Intel 14A Process Optimization for HPC and Mobile Designs
- Menta and Presto Engineering Announce Strategic Collaboration to Accelerate Adaptive ASIC Architectures with Embedded FPGA Technology