JEDEC Updates Groundbreaking High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) Standard
JEDEC Solid State Technology Association, the global leader in the development of standards for the microelectronics industry, today announced the publication of an update to JESD235 High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) DRAM standard.
[...] JEDEC standard JESD235B for HBM leverages Wide I/O and TSV technologies to support densities up to 24 GB per device at speeds up to 307 GB/s. This bandwidth is delivered across a 1024-bit wide device interface that is divided into 8 independent channels on each DRAM stack. The standard can support 2-high, 4-high, 8-high, and 12-high TSV stacks of DRAM at full bandwidth to allow systems flexibility on capacity requirements from 1 GB – 24 GB per stack.
This update extends the per pin bandwidth to 2.4 Gbps, adds a new footprint option to accommodate the 16 Gb-layer and 12-high configurations for higher density components, and updates the MISR polynomial options for these new configurations.
Some existing High Bandwidth Memory products already had a per pin bandwidth of 2.4 Gbps. However, the increase in stack size and density could allow a product with 96 GB of DRAM using just four stacks (16 Gb DRAM × 12 × 4), up from 32 GB (8 Gb DRAM × 8 × 4).
This update apparently applies to HBM2 and is not considered a third or fourth generation of HBM.
Also at Wccftech and AnandTech.
Previously: Samsung Increases Production of 8 GB High Bandwidth Memory 2.0 Stacks
(Score: 3, Funny) by takyon on Thursday December 20 2018, @03:47AM
1. Go to YouTube.
2.
Search "RTX 2080 Ti".Wait a second, they put GDDR6 on it.3. Search
GoogleDuck.com for "HBM Nvidia".4. Go back to GooTube and search for "Titan RTX".
5. Wait for AMD Navi.
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