Cypress Samples 18-Mbit Families of QDR, QDR-II, DDR and DDR-II SRAMs; New Memory Chips Increase Bandwidth and Reduce Latency in Switches, Routers, Servers and Storage Applications.Business Editors/High-Tech Writers SAN JOSE San Jose, city, United States San Jose (sănəzā`, săn hōzā`), city (1990 pop. 782,248), seat of Santa Clara co., W central Calif.; founded 1777, inc. 1850. , Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--July 22, 2003 Cypress Semiconductor Corporation (NYSE NYSE See: New York Stock Exchange : CY), an industry leader in SRAMs and co-founder of the industry's QDR QDR Quadrennial Defense Review (US DoD) QDR Quad Data Rate (Memory Technology) QDR Quality Deficiency Report QDR Quality, Durability and Reliability (Toyota Motor Company) Co-Development Team, has begun sampling new families of 18-Mbit QDR, QDR-II, DDR (Double Data Rate) Refers to an SDRAM memory chip that increases performance by doubling the effective data rate of the frontside bus. For more details, see SDRAM. DDR - Double Data Rate Random Access Memory and DDR-II memory devices. Available in 24 configurations, Cypress's new 18-Mbit QDR/DDR SRAMs increase system-level bandwidth and accelerate read/write capabilities in a variety of data-intensive applications, including network switches and routers, Fibre Channel and iSCSI storage switches and host bus adapters, low-end servers and semiconductor test equipment. After releasing two 9-Mbit products in 2001, this is Cypress's second family of QDR products. The company will introduce 36-Mbit and 72-Mbit product families in early 2004. "Cypress's new QDR, QDR-II, DDR and DDR-II SRAMs expand an already broad portfolio of high bandwidth, low latency Cypress SRAMs that are being used by many of the world's leading networking and storage firms," said Antonio Alvarez, senior vice president of the Memory Products Division at Cypress Semiconductor. "With the advent of our 18-Mbit devices, we're delivering a simple migration path to even greater levels of performance, critical to our customers' success." The QDR Co-Development Team, comprised of Cypress, IDT IDT Integrated Device Technology, Inc. (Santa Clara, CA, USA) IDT I Don't Think IDT Identity Theft IDT Interrupt Descriptor Table IDT Integrated DNA Technologies IDT Inactive Duty Training IDT Instructional Design & Technology , NEC (NEC Corporation, Tokyo, www.nec.com, www.necus.com) An electronics conglomerate known in the U.S. for its monitors. In Japan, it had the lion's share of the PC market until the late 1990s (see PC 98). NEC was founded in Tokyo in 1899 as Nippon Electric Company, Ltd. , Renesas, Samsung, and formerly Micron, has jointly developed specifications for the QDR, QDR-II, DDR and DDR-II SRAM See static RAM. SRAM - static random-access memory architectures. Together, they offer their customers pin-compatible products from multiple world-class suppliers who utilize internally owned fabrication fabrication (fab´rikā´sh n the construction or making of a restoration. plants and technologies. Micron was the first Co-Development Partner to introduce an 18-Mbit QDR/DDR product, but the company recently exited the SRAM market. Cypress's 18-Mbit product offering will offer its customers a 100 percent compatible alternate source. Cypress's new 18-Mbit devices operate at clock frequencies up to 250 MHz (MegaHertZ) One million cycles per second. It is used to measure the transmission speed of electronic devices, including channels, buses and the computer's internal clock. A one-megahertz clock (1 MHz) means some number of bits (16, 32, 64, etc. and provide up to 36 Gbps of bandwidth to increase network capacity. The products' low initial latency -- 1.5 cycles for QDR-II and DDR-II and one cycle for QDR and DDR -- maximizes the efficiency of algorithmic look-up tables, statistics tracking and data buffering. In addition, the devices' 165 fBGA package is 40 percent smaller than alternative solutions. All of the new products are fully compatible with those of the other suppliers in the QDR Co-Development Team. Cypress's QDR (Quad Data Rate Quad data rate (or quad pumping) is a communication signalling technique wherein data is transmitted at both the rising and falling edges of the clock signal, much the same way DDR technology works, but with two clock signals 90° out of phase from each other, effectively ) and QDR-II memories increase bandwidth by supporting separate data inputs and outputs for simultaneous read and write operations. Independent ports transferring data with a double data rate interface results in a 4X improvement in data throughput versus comparable synchronous SRAMs. This provides maximum data throughput, minimal initial latency, and the elimination of data "turn-around" on the data bus, which is required in common I/O devices. Cypress's DDR (Double Data Rate) and DDR-II architectures have the same double data rate interface as QDR and QDR-II with a common I/O (Input/Output) The transfer of data between the CPU and a peripheral device. Every transfer is an output from one device and an input to another. See PC input/output. I/O - Input/Output structure for applications that are heavily read oriented or that have ASICs or FPGAs with pin limitations. In these applications, the DDR and DDR-II architectures offer twice the data bandwidth as traditional synchronous SRAMs with minimal initial latency. Availability Cypress's 18-Mbit QDR, QDR-II, DDR and DDR-II devices are available in 24 configurations. The company is shipping samples of its CY7C1313V18 and CY7C1305V25 devices now, which will be in full production this Fall, and will begin sampling other SRAM configurations in August. For more information, visit Cypress's online at www.cypress.com, or contact your local Cypress sales representative. Photo A photo of Cypress's new 18 Mbit SRAMs can be downloaded from: www.cypress.com/support/link.cfm?mr=18MQDRandDDR. About the QDR Co-Development Team The QDR Co-Development Team was established to define a unique QDR SRAM architecture to address next-generation switches and routers operating at data rates beyond 200 MHz. Since its formation in 1999, the group has exchanged design simulations, test methodologies and common packaging support, and defined product roadmaps. More information about the organization is available at: www.qdrsram.com. About Cypress Cypress Semiconductor Corporation (NYSE: CY) is Connecting from Last Mile to First Mile(TM) with high-performance solutions for personal, network access, enterprise, metro switch, and core communications-system applications. Cypress Connects(TM) using wireless, wireline, digital, and optical transmission standards, including USB USB in full Universal Serial Bus Type of serial bus that allows peripheral devices (disks, modems, printers, digitizers, data gloves, etc.) to be easily connected to a computer. , Fibre Channel, SONET/SDH, Gigabit Ethernet, and DWDM (Dense WDM) The term given to wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) when significantly more channels were being added. Since WDM is increasingly more "dense" all the time, both terms are used synonymously. See WDM. DWDM - wavelength division multiplexing . Leveraging its process and system-level expertise, Cypress makes industry-leading physical layer devices, framers, and network search engines, along with a broad portfolio of high-bandwidth memories, timing technology solutions, and programmable microcontrollers. More information about Cypress is accessible online at www.cypress.com. Cypress, the Cypress logo are registered trademarks of Cypress Semiconductor Corporation. "Connectivity from Last Mile to First Mile" and "Cypress Connects" are trademarks of Cypress. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. |
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