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Data Storage Hardware Technology

Micron Kicks Off Mass Production of 12Gb DRAM Chips (anandtech.com) 52

Micron is now producing its first LPDDR4X memory devices using its second-generation 10nm-class process technology. "The new memory devices offer standard LPDDR4X data transfer rates of up to 4.266 Gbps per pin and consumes less power than earlier LPDDR4 chips," reports AnandTech. From the report: Micron's LPDDR4X devices are made using the company's 1Y-nm fabrication tech and feature a 12 Gb capacity. The manufacturer says that its LPDDR4X memory chips consume 10% less power when compared to its LPDDR4-4266 products; this is because they feature a lower output driver voltage (I/O VDDQ), which the LPDDR4X standard reduces by 45%, from 1.1 V to 0.6 V. Micron's 12 Gb (1.5 GB) LPDDR4X devices feature a slightly lower capacity than competing 16 Gb (2 GB) LPDDR4X offerings, but they are also cheaper to manufacture. As a result, Micron can offer lower-cost quad-die 64-bit LPDDR4X-4266 packages with a 48 Gb (6 GB) capacity and a 34.1 GB/s bandwidth than some of its competitors.
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Micron Kicks Off Mass Production of 12Gb DRAM Chips

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  • by NothingWasAvailable ( 2594547 ) on Thursday November 08, 2018 @09:17PM (#57615430)

    As someone who worked in semi-conductor CAD, 1Y-nm confused me.

    I found an article in EE Times that explains is using 19 nm to 10 nm as three nodes at 1X, 1Y, 1Z, with X, Y, and Z to be defined later.

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday November 08, 2018 @11:57PM (#57615900)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by rrohbeck ( 944847 ) on Friday November 09, 2018 @12:33AM (#57615944)

      I'm rather partial to the LPXDRWTFBBQ product family.

    • people settling for only DOUBLE data rate (DDR,) we should hold out at least for triple data rate (TDR)

      That doesn't make any sense. DDR sends data on both the rising and falling edge of the clock. TDR would have no clock edge to sync the data, so it wouldn't work. If you want more data, then either increase the clock rate, or widen the bus.

      It is possible that the TDR comment was a joke, and I have been whooshed, in which case I apologize for being a humor-impaired Aspie.

      • .... or you send more than one bit per wire, with like four voltage levels, as already done by some pin-limited chips.

      • I think it was in jest, however possibly if you offset adjacent lines 120 degrees, like the phases in a 208 V line, you could get something resembling triple data rate, or at least something that sounded good in marketing. Of course, this triple line data rate memory would be called TLDR.

  • Why can't we get those kind of speeds for DDR4-4266 PC DIMMs? Those are almost impossible to get and then at insane prices.If RAM companies produce this kind of RAM normally, which isn't even specified by JEDEC, so they have to make it cheaper than the competition, then why are there no such DIMMs available?

    https://pcpartpicker.com/produ... [pcpartpicker.com] shows there is basically none from Crucial/Micron. Gamers and generally Ryzen owners would pay lots of money for it. Heck, even good and expensive Crucial DDR4-3200 has

    • Re:DDR4-4266 Speeds? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Gabe Ghearing ( 3618909 ) on Friday November 09, 2018 @02:26AM (#57616100)

      This is LPDDR; Intel and AMD don’t support it. Intel announced support in CannonLake that was supposed to ship in 2016... and still isn’t available to consumers.

      LPDDR4 has been standard on ARM devices(phones/tablets) for quite a few years.

      4266 is the highest rated LPDDR4 chips in the LPDDR4 spec. Even the Galaxy S9 only uses LPDDR4-3732 (1866MHz). https://www.qualcomm.com/produ... [qualcomm.com]

      Maybe Apple’s new iPads use LPDDR-4266.

  • 12 Gb seems wrong. Why would DRAM chips be measured in Gb? It would make more sense to be in GiB ?

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