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DDR5 - Hardwareluxx

Samsung Develops Industrys First HKMG-Based DDR5 Memory; Ideal for Bandwidth-Intensive Advanced Computing Applications

Posted March 25th, 2021 for Samsung 512GB capacity DDR5 module made possible by an 8-layer TSV structure HKMG material reduces power by 13 percent while doubling the speed of DDR4 Samsung Electronics, the world leader in advanced memory technology, today announced that it has expanded its DDR5 DRAM memory portfolio with the industry’s first 512GB DDR5 module based on High-K Metal Gate (HKMG) process technology. Delivering more than twice the performance of DDR4 at up to 7,200 megabits per second (Mbps), the new DDR5 will be capable of orchestrating the most extreme compute-hungry, high-bandwidth workloads in supercomputing, artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML), as well as data analytics applications.

Samsung demos 512GB DDR5 memory aimed at supercomputing, AI workloads

| About | Andy Patrizio is a freelance technology writer based in Orange County, California. He s written for a variety of publications, ranging from Tom s Guide to Wired to Dr. Dobbs Journal. Samsung demos 512GB DDR5 memory aimed at supercomputing, AI workloads It s twice as fast as existing memory and has twice the capacity, paving the way for new use cases. Samsung Samsung Electronics last month announced the creation of a 512GB DDR5 memory module, its first since the JEDEC consortium developed and released the DDR5 standard in July of last year. The new modules are double the max capacity of existing DDR4 and offer up to 7,200Mbps in data transfer rate, double that of conventional DDR4. The memory will be able to handle high-bandwidth workloads in applications such as supercomputing, artificial intelligence, machine learning, and data analytics, the company says.

HW News - DDR5 512GB Sticks, Secret NVIDIA 3080 Ti, RAM Pricing Rise, Intel Name Change | GamersNexus

06:15 | Nvidia Changing Up Silicon Die Names It seems Nvidia is carving new names into its GPUs underneath the hood, as evidenced by HardwareLuxx member “iso0,” who purchased a GeForce RTX 3090 and disassembled it to install a water block. In the process of removing the cooler and shroud, the user discovered that the previous GA102-250-KD-A1 marking had been crossed out, and a newly etched GA102-300-A1 was underneath it.  While the reasoning for this isn’t presently clear, it seems the naming of Nvidia’s GPUs is being shuffled internally on account of the unreleased RTX 3080 Ti. It seems the RTX 3080 Ti may use some form of the GA102-250 die, or a rumored GA102-225 die. For now, however, it seems that RTX 3090 SKUs will now be shipping with the newly christened GA102-300 naming.  

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