Samsung has finished development of a faster, denser--and cheaper--RDRAM chip. The increases in speed and density are likely to benefit PC users by delivering additional system performance to high-end ...
Intel has decided it's time for Rambus memory to stand on its own. The chipmaker, as expected, has begun efforts to phase out subsidies for PC makers using RDRAM, high-speed memory based on designs by ...
Rambus Inc. might have you believe it is singing Timbuk3's 1980's pop hit “The Future's So Bright (I Gotta Wear Shades).” Analysts, however, would argue the company is wearing rose-colored glasses.
Memory design house Rambus Inc. is trying to sort out last week's good news from the bad. At the Intel Developer Forum (IDF), Intel Corp. released roadmaps indicating it is phasing out support for ...
David Mooring, the president of chip designer Rambus, delights in going against the grain. When he joined Rambus in 1991, the company was an unheralded start-up with an idea for making faster PC ...
Intel Corp. wants more Direct Rambus (DRAM), and it is willing to pay extra for it.Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. has accepted an undisclosed sum from Intel in return for apromise to boost RDRAM output, ...
Lower prices for the Pentium 4 processor are stimulating demand for Rambus DRAM (RDRAM), and memory makers like Samsung Electronics and Toshiba are now rushing to increase output of this memory.
Toshiba, Elpida (the NEC-Hitachi DRAM joint venture) and Samsung say they will increase production of Rambus DRAM which is used with Intel’s Pentium4 microprocessor. Toshiba currently makes about two ...
Rambus DRAM-based motherboards seem to have gradually gained in popularity lately with Intel’s move to raise the clock speed of its Pentium 4 processors. Except first-tier makers, second-tier ...
Intel has decided it's time for Rambus memory to stand on its own. The chipmaker, as expected, has begun efforts to phase out subsidies for PC makers using RDRAM, high-speed memory based on designs by ...
Ok, people are saying this Ram is soon to be gone forever. I want to state that if you buy a computer now with PC1066 or whatever and get great performance out of it, who cares if it's gone. Buy at ...
I certainly hope not.....Unless the Company goes out of business and they would not get a cent for the technology....I keep my money going to organizations that don't rape the industry they represent.