Second-Gen DDR SDRAM On The Horizon
cplcap writes "This story in The Register picks up on Samsung's new DDR-II Chips, pushing DDR's speed up to 533 Mb/s and a 4.2GB/s memory bus. Prototype 512MB DIMMs are being produced, and IBM has developed a chipset to take advantage of the speed. There's a little more meat in Samsung's official press release."
Is it a whole new form factor so everyone had to redesign the motherboards and to force incompatability with older systems??
This is important because industrial and corperate-mission-critical is older equipment. and an upgrade path for ram is still important.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
The two big reasons for the generational change are
Yes, this makes for backward-compatibility problems.
Yes, the Committee (JC-42.3) put a huge amount of work into making DDR-II as backward-compatible as possible
Yes, we're starting work on DDR-III. You'll have to wait until 2006 or so.
Target speeds for DDR-II were set at 600 MT/s for fully-loaded systems and 800 MT/s for embedded stuff like graphics.
The signal-integrity issues for DDR-II are ugly, but we met the margin specs with lots of conservativism thrown in, so once we get hands-on time with systems you'll probably see the numbers exceeded just as the original DDR targets were.
Flame away. You can get more info at JEDEC or Advanced Memory International.
The article says that IBM made a chipset to take advantage the new memory speed, but what CPU does the chipset support? Athlon? P4? G4/G5? Anyone? Bueller? Bueller? Frye?
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