40°

Rambus is Transitioning to Fabless Chip Production

Maximum PC: Rambus is a name we haven't heard in some time, though it's one we certainly remember. The company has made numerous headlines over the years, many of which were related to litigation over IP disputes. That's because the Rambus of old built a business around licensing DRAM technology and accusing firms of patent infringement.

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maximumpc.com
260°

DDR5 is already being made; expect it in 2019

PC Aficionado: "It seems just yesterday that Intel dropped their X99 platform with support for DDR4 memory. Now, Rambus, a company who develops memory technologies, announced that they have a functional DDR5 DIMM."

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pcaficionado.com
badz1492397d ago (Edited 2397d ago )

bought my PC right before DDR4 launch and I regretted it a bit for not waiting a little bit longer. but now we are already talking DDR5? WTF? is DDR4 not that much of a leap from 3 that they feel that 5 should come this soon?

KTF262397d ago

you don't really need to worry about this

2019 for DDR5 is normal if you look to DDR release history

DDR (2000) -> DDR2 (2003) -> DDR3 (2007 !!! longest life cycle) -> DDR4 (2014) -> DDR5(2017 NO!! - 2021)

dcbronco2396d ago

You have to take into account that they now face competition from hbm and Intel. They have to push as fast as they can to remain in the industry.

DarkZane2397d ago

Even if you want to play games at 4K/60fps maxed, you don't need more than DDR3 ram anyway.

bluefox7552397d ago

Hopefully it's a bigger jump in performance than it was from DD3 to DD4, which was a bit lackluster IMO.

70°

Rambus and Micron Settle Patent Dispute, Sign $280 Million Licensing Agreement

Maximum PC: There's been no love lost between Rambus and Micron over the years. The two have been mired in litigation since 1990, which is when Rambus first sought license fees and threatened infringement lawsuits against memory makers who turned to the popular SDRAM standard over its own proprietary RDRAM spec. Rambus contended that its patents and inventions also applied to SDRAM, but as far as things are concerned with Micron, it's now a moot point.

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maximumpc.com
20°

Rambus wins $240 million patent lawsuit, cheering investors

Silicon Valley Business Journal- Shares of Sunnyvale-based Rambus jumped more than 8 percent in early trading today, after the company announced it had won a $240 million patent settlement from South Koreaโ€™s SK Hynix. This ends a lawsuit that had languished in the courts since 2000.

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bizjournals.com