Sure, go to the Samsung web site. Samsung is the big supporter of RDRAM, as I have stated many times, on this thread, over the last year. For those who weren't listening, I repeat: Samsung is the big supporter of RDRAM because they are the industry leader in it, and, therefore, if it becomes the standard memory type, Samsung will reap a larger benefit.
But despite this, Samsung is quite aware that RDRAM is very likely history, and they are supporting DDR as fast as they can. They are not telling the public about this, since they really don't have a reason to, but take a look at the evidence on their memory web site: intl.samsungsemi.com
MEMORY
RDRAM links (3): 288M bit, 144M, 128M.
DDR links (2): 256M bit, 128M.
MODULES
RIMM (7): 512M Byte, 384M, 256M, 192M, 128M, 96M, 64M.
DDR DIMM/SODIMM (5): 1G Byte, 512M, 256M, 128M, 64M.
Note that DDR memory goes to twice the density of Rambus memory, and this from Rambus' biggest friend in the industry!
So here are a couple links for you:
DDR 256M bit: intl.samsungsemi.com (look on page 20)
For reference, RDRAM, 284M bit: intl.samsungsemi.com
-- Carl |