"Memory maker Hynix Semiconductor said Thursday it would mass produce DDR SDRAM memory chips certified to run at 550MHz clock-speed starting from April 2004. The new DRAMs will run faster compared to DDR-II chips and are likely to prolong the DDR memory lifespan among computer enthusiasts.
Hynix’s DDR SDRAM chips at 550MHz target PC enthusiasts requiring faster memory devices. For customers looking to upgrade their PCs to DDR-II SDRAM (DDR2), the new 550MHz DDR provides an ideal alternative by simply replacing already installed memory, Hynix said.
While DDR-II memory offers a totally new technology with a lot of potential and promising scalability, typical end-users are more concentrated on actual performance delivered by their system memory as well as the cost of such performance, but not internal architecture of the DRAMs. Due to architectural peculiarities of DDR-II, its latencies are a bit higher compared to DDR resulting in lower performance in cases when fast memory access is more important than high bandwidth.
Dual-channel DDR memory at 550MHz provides 8.80GB/s bandwidth. Dual-channel DDR-II memory at 533MHz is capable of pumping up to 8.53GB per second. Latency settings for 533MHz DDR-II memory modules is typically 4-4-4, while the same parameters for DDR modules do not exceed 3-3-3.
Lower latency settings and substantially lower product costs are two major trumps DDR is going to have over DDR-II this year. One thing DDR cannot provide is huge overclocking potential beyond 533MHz. Nevertheless, such overclocking is not common due to nature of today’s Pentium 4 microprocessors only a few of which can run at PSB speeds significantly exceeding 1066MHz. AMD Athlon 64 microprocessors do not handle memory overclocking very well."
xbit labs