From Wikipedia:
In March 2017, JEDEC announced its plan for the DDR5 specification release in 2018.[4] JEDEC's Server Forum 2017[5][6] claims a date to offer a DDR5 SDRAM preview on June 19, 2017 accompanied by a DDR5 SDRAM Workshop on October 31 – November 1, 2017.[7] Rambus announced a working DDR5 RAM prototype in September 2017, with availability not expected until 2019.[1]
RAM speed and engine strength
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Re: RAM speed and engine strength
Advanced Micro Devices fan.
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Re: RAM speed and engine strength
DRAM will live on as DDR5 memory is slated to reach computers in 2020
"Random access memory latency (RAM latency) refers to the delay that occurs in data transmission as data moves between computer RAM and the processor. RAM latency describes the amount of time it takes for the processor to retrieve data that is present somewhere in the RAM."
"Random access memory latency (RAM latency) refers to the delay that occurs in data transmission as data moves between computer RAM and the processor. RAM latency describes the amount of time it takes for the processor to retrieve data that is present somewhere in the RAM."
Advanced Micro Devices fan.
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Re: RAM speed and engine strength
If Rambus has anything to do with ddr5 then I smell trouble in the future.
Anyway I suppose ddr5 wil have even worse latency timings.
Anyway I suppose ddr5 wil have even worse latency timings.
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Re: RAM speed and engine strength
Why do you say that?Cardoso wrote:If Rambus has anything to do with ddr5 then I smell trouble in the future.
Anyway I suppose ddr5 wil have even worse latency timings.
Advanced Micro Devices fan.
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Re: RAM speed and engine strength
I guess he's referring to the initial P4 fiasco, although that had to do with prices and they're currently quite high, so that wouldn't be a problem right now.Leo wrote:Why do you say that?Cardoso wrote:If Rambus has anything to do with ddr5 then I smell trouble in the future.
Anyway I suppose ddr5 wil have even worse latency timings.
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Re: RAM speed and engine strength
Rambus is a patent buying company, then sues every other company that remotely uses some method/feature mentioned in the patents.
The company has engineers but they never came up with a good product.
The initial P4 RDRAM fiasco had to be solved/finished by Intel engineers. Later they abandoned RDRAM and moved to DDR.
Rambus is more like e patent fighting company than any other thing.
The company has engineers but they never came up with a good product.
The initial P4 RDRAM fiasco had to be solved/finished by Intel engineers. Later they abandoned RDRAM and moved to DDR.
Rambus is more like e patent fighting company than any other thing.
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Re: RAM speed and engine strength
This seems a bit strange to me.Cardoso wrote:Rambus is a patent buying company, then sues every other company that remotely uses some method/feature mentioned in the patents.
The company has engineers but they never came up with a good product.
The initial P4 RDRAM fiasco had to be solved/finished by Intel engineers. Later they abandoned RDRAM and moved to DDR.
Rambus is more like a patent fighting company than any other thing.
Wouldn't a patent BUYING company be EXPECTED to sue when methods/features in the patent are used?
If not, what the hell is the purpose of their business?
Firstly, protection of methods/features is what a patent is for, and the fees to establish/purchase one aren't cheap.
Secondly, wouldn't a "patent buying companies" ONLY goal be to protect the intellectual property they've invested in? How else could they remain profitable? That's their ENTIRE investment.
I know little about the subject matter, but this verbiage just grabbed my attention.
Happy to learn more - this is an interesting topic.
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Re: RAM speed and engine strength
In the US in the early 1980s there was a video game company named Oddessy. I read they made most of their money by suing other companies claiming they had a copyright on video games in general. Strange.Cardoso wrote:Rambus is a patent buying company, then sues every other company that remotely uses some method/feature mentioned in the patents.
The company has engineers but they never came up with a good product.
The initial P4 RDRAM fiasco had to be solved/finished by Intel engineers. Later they abandoned RDRAM and moved to DDR.
Rambus is more like e patent fighting company than any other thing.
Advanced Micro Devices fan.
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Re: RAM speed and engine strength
Using 'edge' in a gametitle was troublesome too: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edge_GamesLeo wrote:In the US in the early 1980s there was a video game company named Oddessy. I read they made most of their money by suing other companies claiming they had a copyright on video games in general. Strange.Cardoso wrote:Rambus is a patent buying company, then sues every other company that remotely uses some method/feature mentioned in the patents.
The company has engineers but they never came up with a good product.
The initial P4 RDRAM fiasco had to be solved/finished by Intel engineers. Later they abandoned RDRAM and moved to DDR.
Rambus is more like e patent fighting company than any other thing.
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- Joined: Fri Sep 16, 2016 6:55 pm
- Location: USA/Minnesota
- Full name: Leo Anger
Re: RAM speed and engine strength
LOL. Bizarre.F. Bluemers wrote:Using 'edge' in a gametitle was troublesome too: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edge_GamesLeo wrote:In the US in the early 1980s there was a video game company named Oddessy. I read they made most of their money by suing other companies claiming they had a copyright on video games in general. Strange.Cardoso wrote:Rambus is a patent buying company, then sues every other company that remotely uses some method/feature mentioned in the patents.
The company has engineers but they never came up with a good product.
The initial P4 RDRAM fiasco had to be solved/finished by Intel engineers. Later they abandoned RDRAM and moved to DDR.
Rambus is more like e patent fighting company than any other thing.
Advanced Micro Devices fan.