Thursday, June 28, 2007
According to the standards group,the new DDR3 standard comes out with the aim to improve the performance and reduce power compared with to the DDR1 and DDR2 memory schemes .
JEDEC, the memory standards association, expects the new standard to be widely adopted. DDR3 is a standard for SDRAM -- Synchronous Dynamic Random Access -- memory and specifies a 1.5 volt power supply. DDR1 drew 1.8 volts and DDR2 2.5 volts. DDR2 clocked the memory bus at twice the memory cell speed to trade off an increase in memory cell latency against an overall increase in memory throughput. DDR3 clocks the memory bus at four times the memory cell speed to make the same trade-off but this time with a lower power consumption. DDR3 has an 8-bit wide prefetch buffer; DDR2's is 4 bit; and DDR's is 2 bit. DDR3 should win out over DDR2 where large amounts of data have to be transferred in and out of memory.
The DDR3 standard is intended to operate over a performance range from 800 to 1600 MT/s (million transfers per second) and device densities from 512 Mb to 8 Gb in monolithic and stacked packages. These could dramatically increase RAM capacities in PCs and mobile phones, better supporting, for example, a move to 64-bit PCs.
DDR3 represents an extension of DRAM's applicability to a far richer multimedia world and wider range of intelligent electronic devices.
JEDEC is completing publication and release of a range of DDR3-based memory modules, including Registered DIMMs (Dual Inline Memory Module) , Unbuffered DIMMs, SO (Small Outline) DIMMs and other module types and configurations intended for use in desktop, mobile and server computer systems, telecommunications, point of sale and a wide range of other electronic products. Support devices have also been developed and include registers, PLL's (phase-locked loops) and other interface devices optimized for use with the new technology.
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