Smartphones are starting to sport rather insane amounts of memory, up to 16GB in some places, but that still has nothing over RAM for PCs, servers, and HPCs. Memory in those computers number in three ...
Who doesn’t want more speed at less power? Samsung Electronics announced a cutting-edge new 512GB DDR5 RAM module Thursday – which it said would consume 13% less electricity while performing at twice ...
Samsung has announced the development of the industry's first 512GB DDR5-7200 memory modules. The announcement took place at Hot Chips 33, and Hardware Luxx has shared some illuminating slides and ...
Intel's Optane DC Persistent Memory aims to bridge the gap between RAM and SSDs. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. When Intel first ...
While consumers today typically use computers with 8GB or 16GB of DDR4 RAM inside, Samsung is pushing ahead with the next generation of memory modules. Its latest stick of RAM is a 512GB DDR5 module ...
Samsung has claimed it has developed the industry's first 512 GB module of DDR5 memory, running at DDR5-7200. Designed for server and enterprise use, Samsung shared details about the new RAM module at ...
Samsung has just announced it has made the world's first 512GB DDR5 memory module, using High-K Metal Gate (HKMG) process technology. We have 7200Mbps speed here with the DDR5 module, double the ...
DDR5 RAM will start appearing in more and more of the best gaming PC builds once AMD's Zen 4 and Intel's Alder Lake CPUs come to market later this year and into 2022. We've seen a few manufacturers ...
Samsung is laying claim to the first-ever 512GB Compute Express Link (CXL) memory module, which packs four times the DRAM as its previous version. In doing so, Samsung provides an upgrade path to ...
In brief: Like other memory manufacturers, Samsung doesn't expect DDR5 to become mainstream before 2023. In the meantime, the South Korean company is building monster-sized DDR5-7200 modules for the ...
The new module will be used in servers performing "the most extreme compute-hungry, high-bandwidth workloads." That means supercomputers, artificial intelligence, and machine learning. It was made ...