High-speed chip interface licensing company Rambus Inc. announced Wednesday it has signed a new patent license agreement with Toshiba Corporation.
According to Rambus, the agreement grants Toshiba a license to Rambus patents for SDRAM and DDR SDRAM memory controllers, adding to current licenses that include Rambus' XDR memory solution, DDR2 interface cells and FlexIO processor bus interface as well as other Rambus serial link interface designs for Advanced Backplane, Fibre Channel and PCI Express applications.
"Toshiba was our first patent licensee and we are pleased to continue this long and valuable relationship with a trusted partner," said Sharon Holt, Rambus' senior vice president of sales, licensing and marketing. "Our focus of licensing industry-leading companies with both our products and patents continues to help push the boundaries of what our collective engineering teams can accomplish. We look forward to many years of development with Toshiba."
Copyright 2006 by United Press International
Related stories:
Rambus signs licensing deal with AMD
Rambus said Tuesday it has signed a five-year licensing agreement with Advanced Micro Devices, giving AMD a license to Rambus patents.
Elpida Introduces the World's Fastest DRAM Based on the Rambus XDR Memory Architecture
Elpida Memory, Japan's leading global supplier of Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM) and Rambus Inc., one of the world's premier technology licensing companies specializing in high-speed chip architectures, today introduced the industry's fastest DRAM, the 512 Megabit (Mb), 4.8GHz XDR DRAM, based on Rambus' XDR memory architecture.
Rambus licenses Cell BE chips to IBM
Rambus has licensed chip technology to IBM for use in the production of Cell Broadband Engine (Cell BE) processors for computers and consumer electronics.
Samsung's first 90nm 512Mb DRAM memory adopted for use in Playstation 3
Samsung Electronics today announced that it has produced the first 90-nanometer production samples of 512-Megabit XDR (eXtreme Data Rate) DRAM, the fastest memory for multimedia applications.
The Samsung 512Mb XDR DRAM can transmit data with up to 9.6 GigaBytes per second, 12 times faster than DDR400 memory and 6 times faster than leading RDRAM (PC 800) devices. It uses advanced 90-nanometer memory technology to achieve a peak operating speed of 4.8Gbps at 1.8 volts.
XDR DRAM from Samsung will be adopted for Sony Computer Entertainment’s next generation computer entertainment system, Playstation 3.
Rambus Unveils Micro-Threading in DRAM Cores
Delivers up to 4x Performance Improvement in 3D Graphics and Other Applications
Rambus Inc., one of the world's premier technology licensing companies specializing in high-speed chip interfaces, today unveiled an architectural breakthrough of applying micro-threading to DRAM cores. This innovation significantly increases memory subsystem efficiency, resulting in up to four times greater performance when compared to a traditional DRAM in applications such as 3D graphics, advanced video imaging, and network routing and switching.
Elpida's 512 Megabit XDRTM DRAM Provides Industry-Leading Data Transfer Rate
3.2 GHz Operation Enables 6.4 Gigabytes per second (GB/s) Bandwidth within a Single Device
Elpida Memory, Inc., Japan's leading global supplier of Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM), today announced the availability of 512 Megabit XDRTM DRAM devices in sample quantities. The new devices operate at 3.2 GHz, providing an industry-leading data transfer rate of 6.4 Gigabytes per second (GB/s) within a single device for digital consumer electronics applications. The XDR DRAM architecture offers the highest performance, next-generation memory available for applications such as digital televisions and home servers that require high bandwidth to support high-end graphics, superb digital imaging and advanced multimedia. XDR DRAM is based on the XDR memory interface technology developed by Rambus Inc.
Samsung to Produce World's Fastest XDR DRAM
Samsung Electronics, the world leader in advanced memory technology, announced that it has begun mass producing 256Mb XDR (short for "eXtreme Data Rate") DRAM, a next-generation memory device for multimedia applications. The new memory targets applications that require the ability to process high-quality video, such as the latest game consoles, digital TVs, servers and workstations.