Con il comunicato stampa di seguito allegato, Elpida Memory ha annunciato il completamento dello sviluppo di nuovi chip di RAM G-DDR5 da 2-gigabit (2Gb) con interconnessioni in rame caratterizzati da una elevata densità, elevate prestazioni e basso consumo di potenza. I chip sono fabbricati con un processo di fabbricazione a 50nm.
In accordo al produttore, le nuove soluzioni sono indirizzate non soltanto all'equipaggiamento delle schede grafiche e delle sezioni video delle console ma anche ai sistemi dedicati alla simulazione, alla elaborazione delle immagini e dei video e ai sistemi medicali.
Elpida Memory ha cominciato la spedizione dei primi sample di G-DDR5 da 2-gigabit nel corso del mese corrente; la produzione in volumi dei chip avrà inizio nel periodo compreso tra il prossimo mese di luglio e quello di settembre.
Elpida Memory, Inc. (TOKYO: 6665), Japan's leading global supplier of Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM), today announced that it had completed development of a high-density, high-speed, low-power consumption 50nm process 2-gigabit GDDR5 using copper interconnects (product name: EDW2032BABG). The new GDDR5, the first graphics DRAM designed by Elpida, was developed at the company's Munich Design Center in Germany.
Applications for GDDR (GDDR: Graphics Double Data Rate) memory devices used with GPU (Graphics Processing Unit) are found not only in such graphic processing equipment as game consoles and PC graphics cards but also in equipment that require high-performance computing for use in such areas as science and technology, physical simulation, digital image processing and video conversion. Using 2-gigabit GDDR5 in these applications can double the frame buffer size of each GPU compared with 1-gigabit memory products.
As a result, the GPU can perform high-speed processing without exchanging large-volume image data with the main memory, making possible realistic PC graphics images. Also, use of 2-gigabit GDDR5 in such fields as science & technology computing and physical simulations is expected to improve system performance, as systems installed with the new graphics DRAM can handle larger amounts of data and more thread processing.
At present, Elpida is outsourcing 1-gigabit GDDR3/GDDR5 production to Taiwan-based Winbond Electronics Corporation. The company's Hiroshima Plant, however, plans to handle 2-gigabit GDDR5 production. Basing this production in Hiroshima enables Elpida to provide a more timely and flexible response to anticipated future growth in graphics DRAM demand.
Elpida plans to begin sample shipments of the new 2-gigabit GDDR5 in July 2010. Mass production is expected to get underway in the CY 2010 third quarter (July-Sept).
News Source: Elpida Memory Press Release
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