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Technology Stocks : Rambus (RMBS) - Eagle or Penguin -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ibexx who wrote (2278)11/14/1997 1:44:00 PM
From: lbs  Respond to of 93625
 
No, the pain, the pain. RMBS is also flying. This market is impossible to figure out. I sold a bunch of stuff on Wednesday after the reaction FMOC.

I will get back on track in the next few weeks,

Dan



To: Ibexx who wrote (2278)11/17/1997 2:20:00 AM
From: Ibexx  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93625
 
Thread,

Interesting articles re. Rambus:
__________
From EETimes

November 17, 1997, Issue: 981
Section: White Paper

Mike Farmwald -- Mining the low-cost PC

By Rick Boyd-Merritt

In 1987, Mike Farmwald had an idea for "a little backplane bus" that would act as a memory interface on a MIPS R6000 processor. That interface ultimately led to the founding of Rambus Inc. (Mountain View, Calif.), whose Direct Rambus DRAM architecture is expected to become a key component in future desktop PCs.....

techweb.com

Ibexx



To: Ibexx who wrote (2278)11/20/1997 6:51:00 AM
From: Ibexx  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 93625
 
Thread,

Rambus news:
_______

LG Makes High-Speed 64Mb Rambus DRAM Chip

November 20, 1997 (SEOUL) -- LG Semicon Inc. developed a 64Mb Rambus dynamic random access memory (DRAM) microchip with a very fast data-transfer speed.

The new microchip can transfer data at a rate of 700MBps (megabytes per second), the company announced.

The so-called second-generation Rambus DRAM chip (concurrent version) has a capacity to transfer data equivalent to 43,750 newspaper pages per second, or four times faster than high-speed synchronous DRAMs, LG Semicon said.

Company officials said the new chips will be used as high-capacity graphics memory in workstations, digital TV sets and asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) switches.

The new memory microchips will help LG Semicon in leading the emerging graphics memory market and will pave the way for the development of a third-generation 64Mb Rambus DRAM chip (direct version), the company said.

Commercial production of the new memory chips will begin in early 1998.

Also, LG Semicon plans to produce 1 million units a month of 18Mb Rambus DRAMs beginning this month and a concurrent version of an 18Mb Rambus DRAM in December.

LG Semicon is displaying the new microchips at the '97 Fall Comdex Show in Las Vegas.

japanbiztech.com:80/articles/KREL971120MBN001P0T0F0.html

Ibexx