Elpida Memory's 512 Megabit XDR DRAM provides industry-leading data transfer rate for digital consumer electronics.Elpida Memory, Inc. (Elpida), Japan's leading global supplier of Dynamic Random Access Memory Dynamic random access memory (DRAM) is a type of random access memory that stores each bit of data in a separate capacitor within an integrated circuit. Since real capacitors leak charge, the information eventually fades unless the capacitor charge is refreshed periodically. (DRAM), has announced the availability of 512 Megabit XDR DRAM devices in sample quantities. The new devices operate at 3.2 GHz, providing an industry-leading data transfer rate of 6.4 Gigabytes per second (GB/ s) within a single device for digital consumer electronics applications. The XDR DRAM architecture offers the highest performance, next-generation memory available for applications such as digital televisions and home servers that require high bandwidth to support high-end graphics, superb digital imaging and advanced multimedia. XDR DRAM is based on the XDR (1) (EXternal Data Representation) A data format developed by Sun that is part of its networking standards. It deals with integer size, byte ordering, data representation, etc. and is used as an interchange format. memory interface technology developed by Rambus Inc. "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). "Elpida believes that XDR memory has tremendous potential in a wide variety of multimedia applications. Our 512 Megabit XDR DRAM is an ideal solution to provide maximum performance with a minimum number of devices allowing customers to save valuable board space." "As a key supplier of XDR DRAM, Elpida plays a critical role in delivering this innovative new technology to market," said Rich Warmke, director of marketing at Rambus. "With a roadmap providing an order of magnitude A change in quantity or volume as measured by the decimal point. For example, from tens to hundreds is one order of magnitude. Tens to thousands is two orders of magnitude; tens to millions is three orders of magnitude, etc. increase in DRAM bandwidth over today's best-in-class commodity DRAMs, XDR DRAM is well-positioned to establish itself as the high-speed memory solution of choice." Elpida's 512 Megabit XDR DRAM (Part number: EDX EDX Energy Dispersive X-Ray (Spectroscopy) EDX Electronic Data Exchange EDX Extended Data Register EDX Event-Driven Executive (IBM Series/1 OS) EDX Event-Based Data Exchange (UPNet) 5116ABSE ABSE Association Burkinabé pour la Survie de l'Enfance ABSE Association of Boat Safety Examiners ABSE Agent-Based System Engineering ) devices are organized as 4M words x 16-bits x 8 banks and with 2.4, 3.2, 4.0 GHz operation, they offer more than 4 times the peak bandwidth of the latest 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 2 standard memory adopted in PC applications. The new devices are manufactured using Elpida's 0.10-micron process technology and are available in 104-pin FBGA FBGA Fine-Pitch Ball Grid Array FBGA Fine Pitch Bga FBGA Fine Line Bga packages. To support both high speed and robust data transfer, the devices utilize advanced Rambus-specific features such as Differential Rambus Signal Level (DRSL DRSL Differential Rambus Signaling Levels (bi-directional differential signaling technology) ) interface, which minimizes the signal swing and noise, and Octal Data Rate (ODR) which transfers 8 bits per clock cycle to achieve 3.2 GHz operation even with the commonly used 400 MHz clock. The 512 Megabit XDR devices also feature programmable on-chip termination, adaptive impedance matching, dynamic request scheduling and zero overhead refresh. Elpida's 512 Megabit XDR DRAM devices (Part number: EDX5116ABSE) are currently sampling to customers. Volume production is expected in the second half of 2005. |
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