After an abrupt decline in 2019 followed by two positive years in 2020 and 2021, the DRAM market rapidly entered a new downward phase in the second half of 2022, according to France-based...
After plunging over 40% in 2022, DRAM prices are likely to further drop 30-40% in 2023 given the relatively unclear prospects for mainstream applications in handsets...
China-based Montage Technology, dedicated to memory interface products and PCIe retimer chips, has recently kicked off volume production of its latest PCIe5.0/CXL 2.0 retimer, which...
Micron Technology announced that its DDR5 server memory portfolio for the data center is now fully validated on the 4th Gen Intel Xeon Scalable processor family. Micron DDR5 memory...
DRAM prices are poised to continue their slide in the first quarter of 2023, with mainstream DDR4 prices declining 15-20%, according to industry sources. In three to four months,...
DDR5 prices have fallen substantially since the second half of 2022, with the price drops poised to accelerate the memory's adoption among servers and PCs, according to industry so...
As part of their efforts to bolster revenues and profits amid prolonged market downturns, major memory makers Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix and Micron Technology are all set to step...
Samsung Electronics has announced the development of its 16-gigabit (Gb) DDR5 DRAM built using 12nm-class process technology, as well as the completion of product evaluation for compatibility...
SK Hynix has developed working samples of DDR5 multiplexer combined ranks (MCR) dual in-line memory module, which the memory chipmaker claims is the world's fastest server DRAM pro...
Drops in DDR5 memory prices may widen to nearly 20% in the fourth quarter, due to falling demand for notebooks and PCs, as well as a slowdown in server demand, according to market...
DRAM memory prices are expected to fall 13-18% sequentially in the fourth quarter of 2022, after registering a 10-15% decline in the third quarter, according to TrendForce.
The adoption of DDR5 memory in new-generation Intel and AMD processors will boost the amount of power management ICs (PMIC) used, according to sources at PMIC suppliers.