Hi,
i've heard that RDRAM is, from the technical point of view, really the most modern RAM technology... In our school (electrical engineering) I've talked to some teachers and they agree, but please correct me if I'm wrong. I mean, why do they stop supporting the better technology sometimes, and support the worse one?
I have a few questions about RAMBUS:
1.) It is a serial technology, vs DDR (parallel). Since all modern buses/ports are serial ones (Hypertransport, USB2.0, FireWire, V-Link, Infiniband), is this the future or is it not? Why are the last parallel technologies DDR and the old PCI bus (and AGP), as long as I know...?
And I heard that they are going to use serial interconnects with DDR-II (or was it DDR-III?), I mean, it isn't possible to go up with the operating frequency as high as you want? I heard that parallel connects get difficult at higher frequencies....
2) Why does Intel give up the support of RAMBUS, if it's the most modern architecture? Why, because it isn't more expensive than DDR?
3.) If you would increase RAMBUS' bus width to 32bit, you would get a very cool RAM bandwith (6.4 GB/S with dual channels and 800MHz) *gg* wow!!! NO DDR could do this at the moment....
So please help me out and give me answers ... and sorry for my bad english...
Thanks in advance!
i've heard that RDRAM is, from the technical point of view, really the most modern RAM technology... In our school (electrical engineering) I've talked to some teachers and they agree, but please correct me if I'm wrong. I mean, why do they stop supporting the better technology sometimes, and support the worse one?
I have a few questions about RAMBUS:
1.) It is a serial technology, vs DDR (parallel). Since all modern buses/ports are serial ones (Hypertransport, USB2.0, FireWire, V-Link, Infiniband), is this the future or is it not? Why are the last parallel technologies DDR and the old PCI bus (and AGP), as long as I know...?
And I heard that they are going to use serial interconnects with DDR-II (or was it DDR-III?), I mean, it isn't possible to go up with the operating frequency as high as you want? I heard that parallel connects get difficult at higher frequencies....
2) Why does Intel give up the support of RAMBUS, if it's the most modern architecture? Why, because it isn't more expensive than DDR?
3.) If you would increase RAMBUS' bus width to 32bit, you would get a very cool RAM bandwith (6.4 GB/S with dual channels and 800MHz) *gg* wow!!! NO DDR could do this at the moment....
So please help me out and give me answers ... and sorry for my bad english...
Thanks in advance!