main
Report a problem

Samsung begins production of 50nm GDDR5 memory

Sam Symons   on 14 February 2009 - 02:28 · 17 comments & 3863 views

Advertisement (Why?)
According to Market Watch, Samsung has begun production of new GDDR5 graphic memory chips, the fastest of all chips so far.

These new memory chips will be manufactured using a 50nm process, and Mueez Deen, director of mobile and graphics memory for Samsung has said, "Our early 2009 introduction of GDDR5 chips will help us to meet the growing demand for higher performance graphics memory in PCs, graphic cards and game consoles." He also noted, "Because GDDR5 is the fastest and highest performing memory in the world, we're able to improve the gaming experience with it across all platforms."

These new chips will support a modest 7.0Gbps transfer rate, and the memory will render 3D images with a maximum of 28GB/s, beating the old GDDR4 graphics memory chips by 17.2GB/s. This will support high resolution Blu-ray and HD-DVD video, and according to Market Watch, is the equivalent of 19 1.5gb DVD-resolution movies per second. This is quite an improvement as you can see, and owes it's speed increase to a new method that means GDDR5 memory can run without having to synchronize the read/write functions to the operation of the clock.

This all means a lot, but another important improvement is that Samsung expects a production efficiency improvement of over 100%, and will run with a 20% reduction in power consumption. Essentially: faster, better and cheaper graphics chips. Samsung expects that, by the end of the year, GDDR5 graphic memory will account for a 20% of market share.

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 17 additional comments
#1 MightyJordan on 14 Feb 2009 - 11:35
Awesome!
#2 tiagosilva29 on 14 Feb 2009 - 11:36
I... just can't... keep up... the pace.
#3 cabron on 14 Feb 2009 - 12:11
damn...
(6 replies) #4 MR_Candyman on 14 Feb 2009 - 16:00
Am I the only one who thinks the speed at which new DDR versions is being released has become a bit of a joke? I'm all for faster memory, especially since it will spread into faster SSD, but as tiagosilva29 says, it's getting a bit hard to keep up.
#4.1 non.sequitur2 on 14 Feb 2009 - 16:44
MR_Candyman said,
Am I the only one who thinks the speed at which new DDR versions is being released has become a bit of a joke? I'm all for faster memory, especially since it will spread into faster SSD, but as tiagosilva29 says, it's getting a bit hard to keep up.


Wow, cry me a river...
#4.2 exotoxic on 14 Feb 2009 - 16:46
no one forces you to buy the latest stuff... save your money and skip this and wait for the next generation
#4.3 Sartoris on 14 Feb 2009 - 17:20
Seriously. If your current stuff works, you don't need to upgrade.
Wahhh! Progress!
#4.4 MR_Candyman on 14 Feb 2009 - 19:44
Obviously you guys are a little slow, so I'll bring you up to speed. This fast advance is BAD for consumers, who get confused and frustrated with understanding the differences, and with even doing upgrades. Most people don't know if they use DDR, DDR2, 3, ect. Yes, GDDR technology trickles down, and will pretty soon to form DDR4. This fast innovation also makes it hard on manufacturers because it means they have to introduce more products, which costs them more money. Since each product will also sell less volume because there are more products, the return investment goes down all the time.

Get your heads out of your asses and think of the bigger picture.
#4.5 Intelman on 14 Feb 2009 - 20:14
I think you need to rethink your picture MR_Candyman.
#4.6 tiagosilva29 on 14 Feb 2009 - 22:37
My issue is this was really all about me not being able to keep up with what's new. It wasn't intended to be a consumer's rant because I'm not really a consumer on this. No money and no will. But MR_Candyman does have a point.
#5 Intelman on 14 Feb 2009 - 20:15
Who manufactures GDDR5 for the ATI 4870 ?
(1 reply) #6 thequestor on 14 Feb 2009 - 23:16
And this is new how? My 4870 X2 and 4870 both have DDR5 on them. And they are pushing 6 months old now.
#6.1 siyama on 15 Feb 2009 - 06:15
Maybe you should read the article more carefully.
(1 reply) #7 thequestor on 14 Feb 2009 - 23:18
#7.1 Ricmacas on 15 Feb 2009 - 11:07
Radeon HD 4870 X2... Most reviews tell me that it is better than Nvidia's graphics... Interesting...
Amazing power you have there, I hope you use that in Computing Grids.
#8 Angel Blue01 on 15 Feb 2009 - 13:29
Wow and prices for DDR3 arn't low enough yet for me to use it even if the latest boards support it...
#9 skynetXrules on 15 Feb 2009 - 15:35
GDDR has nothing to do with DDR

although the tech is similar ,they are very differnt .

i can foresee DDR4 coming in 2012 !

DDR1 is long died tech .i bet most manufacturer stopped working on it from long time

Commenting has either been disabled on this article or you are not logged in. Click here to login or register, its free!

Note: Anonymous commenting is disabled in order to keep the quality of responses to a high standard.

Advertisement (Why?)