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Technology Stocks : Rambus (RMBS) - Eagle or Penguin
RMBS 94.69-0.8%3:59 PM EST

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To: Bilow who wrote (36174)1/3/2000 3:06:00 PM
From: richard surckla  Read Replies (3) of 93625
 
Bilow... You've got egg all over your face and poop in your pants. By 2000 Samsung says that Rambus will be 50% of the total DRAM market.

Bilow why don't you contact Samsung and help out their engineers. Tell them what a mistake they are making. Tell them that you have all the answers to correct their thinking. Tell them how wrong they are and how right you are. Look at all the money you will save them. Maybe they will give you a reward for being so smart.

Ha! Ha! Ha!... DEAD, DEAD, DEAD MY FOOT!

Thanks to slimchance on Yahoo for this find:

Samsung claims 288-Mbit Rambus
DRAM now ready

By SBN news staff
Semiconductor Business News
(01/03/00, 9:24 a.m. EDT)

SEOUL ? Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. today claimed to be the first company
to finish development of a 288-megabit DRAM, based on the Direct Rambus
format. In addition, Samsung said it has completed work on a new 576-Mbyte
Rambus in-line memory module (RIMM), which uses sixteen 288-Mbit RDRAM
chips.

The Korean chip maker said the 288-Mbit RDRAM will be fabricated with a
0.17-micron process technology, but the company did not indicate when volume
production of the new memory or 576-Mbyte RIMMs would begin. However,
Samsung said it plans to accelerate production of Rambus memories in general
to serve a market segment that is expected to be about 10 percent of the total
DRAM business in 2000 ? or about $3 billion.

By 2002, Samsung said the Rambus segment will be about 50 percent of the
total DRAM market.


With sixteen 288-Mbit RDRAM chips, the 576-Mbyte RIMM modules can support
PC systems with up to 1 gigabyte of storage or larger workstations and server
systems with up to 8 gigabtye of memory, Samsung said. The 288-Mbit chips are
housed in a Micro ball-grid array (BGA) package.

The company did not release information on pricing of the 288-Mbit RDRAM or
modules.

eetimes.com
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