Memory

Demand for high-performance processors for AI training is skyrocketing, and consequently so is the demand for the components that go into these processors. So much so that SK hynix this week is very publicly announcing that the company's high-bandwidth memory (HBM) production capacity has already sold out for the rest of 2024, and even most of 2025 has already sold out as well. SK hynix currently produces various types of HBM memory for customers like Amazon, AMD, Facebook, Google (Broadcom), Intel, Microsoft, and, of course, NVIDIA. The latter is an especially prolific consumer of HBM3 and HBM3E memory for its H100/H200/GH200 accelerators, as NVIDIA is also working to fill what remains an insatiable (and unmet) demand for its accelerators. As a result, HBM memory orders, which...

Weekly Memory & Motherboard Price Guide: April 2001 1st Edition

Higher bandwidth memory solutions fall in price once again, it's clear where the market is headed and PC133 isn't it. Find out what the best buys are in...

0 by Kiran Venkatesh on 4/1/2001

Weekly Memory & Motherboard Price Guide: March 2001 1st Edition

It's Price Guide time and what a time it is to purchase memory and motherboards. The prices of Socket-A motherboards and the rest of the boards in general...

0 by Kiran Venkatesh on 3/2/2001

Rambus DRAM Part 2: Performance

Last week we took a look at the theory behind the need for a higher bandwidth solution and illustrated that RDRAM was a solution that could potentially fit the...

0 by Anand Lal Shimpi on 5/22/2000

Rambus DRAM: Uncovering Facts & Burying Rumors

There is a lot of misinformation floating around the 'net regarding a little company known as Rambus and their extremely expensive memory technology. Would you believe that we...

2 by Anand Lal Shimpi on 5/15/2000

PC133 SDRAM Roundup - April 2000

For the first time in a year we take a look at the latest SDRAM modules out on the market and crown a winner. This time around the...

0 by Anand Lal Shimpi on 4/3/2000

RAM Guide

1 by Anand Lal Shimpi on 11/17/1997

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