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DRAM bit growth ties to industry landscape


Thursday, February 19, 2015

DRAM bit volume grew by an average of 67% per year from 1995-2005, according to IC Insights. In the 10 years since then, however, bit volume growth has averaged 43% per year, the research firm observed.

A worldwide economy mired in recession reduced bit volume growth to an all-time low of 21% in 2009 – quite a contrast to the 1990s to 2000 when annual DRAM bit volume growth remained above 70%, IC Insights said. With recovery from the recession in full swing in 2010 and DRAM suppliers transitioning to above 1Gb DRAM, bit volume increased 47% and another 51% in 2011. But with fewer shipments of desktops and notebooks (the primary application for DRAM) and no significant increase in the average DRAM memory content in these systems, fairly strong bit volume growth came to an end in 2012.

DRAM bit volume has rapidly migrated to mobile and server applications at the expense of PCs (desktops and notebooks), which have long been the largest application for DRAM bits, IC Insights noted. Bit volume for desktop/notebook computers shrank to less than 50% share in 2012 yet still remained the largest end-use application. In 2014, mobile applications became the largest end-use application for DRAM bits.

Main system memory in PCs has been trending downward for several years and, in 2014, grew by its smallest percentage since the 1990s. This low growth rate was partially due to changing dynamics within the computer market and the fact that new versions of Microsoft Windows operating systems do not require more system memory, as was the case in the previous two decades, IC Insights indicated. By 2016, IC Insights forecasts that portable personal computing systems (i.e., tablet PCs) will surpass shipments of desktops and notebooks, which are often sold with 6GB or more of DRAM today.

IC Insights estimates that it now takes the sale of 2.8 tablets to roughly equal the IC revenues generated from the sale of one notebook. Consequently, high unit growth in tablets and the slowdown in notebook shipments present a major challenge for major IC suppliers – particularly DRAM manufacturers – and the prospect for long-term DRAM bit volume growth.

By: DocMemory
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