Breaking

Thursday, January 18, 2018

Samsung makes 2.4Gbps per pin 8GB DRAM dubbed Aquabolt




Samsung has begun production of its 2.4Gbps per pin "second-generation" 8GB HBM2 (High Bandwidth Memory) DRAM dubbed Aquabolt, the company announced.

The latest DRAM can process 307GB of data in one second, the South Korean tech giant said. By having four packages of the DRAM, a system can process 1.2TB of data per second.

Samsung achieved 2.4Gbps by stacking 8 levels of 8Gb chips on a buffer chip.

The new product is a super-premium offering, Samsung said, and is aimed at supercomputers, artificial intelligence solutions, and graphics cards.

By pushing the product alongside its predecessor Flarebolt, which offered 1.6Gbps and 2Gbps, the company said it will expand to claim triple its share in HBM2 DRAM.

The South Korean tech giant reaped record profits from its chip business last year. The company expects 53.6 trillion won in operating profits for 2017, near double that of the previous year. Its semiconductor business is estimated to have contributed 35 trillion won to the total.

The company is the world's largest memory chip vendor, in both DRAM and NAND. Samsung toppled Intel as the number one in semiconductor revenue last year for the first time in 24 years.

Samsung Galaxy S9 will be unveiled at the Mobile World Congress in February, the company's mobile boss said, denying rumors of a CES 2018 unveiling.

Samsung's new 85-inch QLED TV is capable of converting low-resolution videos into 8K resolution.

Samsung commits to unlock the FM radio chip in future phones

An unlocked FM chip inside a phone is about more than just free local radio.

Samsung partners with St Vincent's Hospital for pain management with VR (TechRepublic)

At Samsung's inaugural Healthcare smart summit, professor Steven Faux at Sydney's St Vincent Hospital talked TechRepublic through their use of virtual reality to manage pain management as part of an u...

Samsung and Harman have unveiled a digital cockpit and a telematics solution at CES. The South Korean tech giant also launched its DRVLINE platform for OEMs and MaaS providers in the autonomous driving space.


No comments:

Post a Comment