Samsung Electronics has started sampling what it claims is the industry's first monolithic 4Gb, low-power DDR2 (LPDDR2) DRAM using 30nm-class technology. The chip will be used in high-end mobile applications such as smartphones and tablet PCs.
The new 4Gb LPDDR2 DRAM can transfer up to 1,066Mbps, which approaches the performance of memory solutions for PC applications. It more than doubles the performance of the industry's previous mobile DRAM, which operates between 333Mbps and 400Mbps.
Samsung will begin sampling 8Gb LPDDR2 DRAM by stacking two 4Gb chips in a single package, as it is expected that 8Gb will become the mainstream density for the mobile DRAM market next year.
Samsung HKMG DDR5
Samsung Electronics has expanded its DDR5 DRAM memory portfolio with a 512GB DDR5 module...
Photo: Company
Nvidia GeForce RTX 30 series GPUs
Nvidia's GeForce RTX 30 series GPUs are powered by the company's Ampere architecture. The...
Photo: Company
Apple HomePod mini
Apple's HomePod mini is the newest addition to the HomePod family. At just 3.3 inches tall,...
Photo: Company
Apple 13-inch MacBook Pro with Magic Keyboard
Apple has updated the 13-inch MacBook Pro with the new Magic Keyboard for an improved typing...
Photo: Company
Apple iPad Pros
Apple's new iPad Pros comes with the latest A12Z Bionic chip, an ultra-wide camera, studio-quality...
Photo: Company
As Microsoft transitions from a software giant to a cloud leader, with its cloud business now accounting...
China market news coverage
CSP in-house development of ASIC accelerators
Google TPUs will see a share of over 70% in the in-house developed cloud ASIC accelerator market in 2024; an all-optical network...
AI chip market outlook 2023-2028: Insights from demand and supply perspectives
The growing demand for AI computational power is accelerating advancements in hardware and chip technology, necessitating innovation...
Automotive CIS tech development, 2024
The popularization of autonomous driving is boosting demand for automotive CIS with LFM and HDR being mainstream development...