Micron ships DDR 2 to 'Lindenhurst' server vendors
Omega65
Philadelphia, Pa
The Reg: <a href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/3/32861.html" target=_blank>Micron ships DDR 2 to 'Lindenhurst' server vendors</a>
Micron today became the latest memory manufacturer to win Intel approval for the use of its DDR 2 SDRAM in the chip giant's upcoming server chipsets. It also said that it had begun shipping DIMMs to "major OEM customers".
Micron will offer 256MB and 512MB registered DIMMs based on 400MHz and 533MHz 256Mb DDR 2 chips for Intel's 'Lindenhurst' and 'Lindenhurst-VS' chipsets, Xeon DP-oriented products due for release early next year and aimed at volume and value markets, respectively.
<a href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/3/32861.html" target=_blank>more here</a>
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The Reg: <a href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/3/32864.html" target=_blank>DRAM makers mass to support Lindenhurst</a>
Hynix, Samsung, Elpida and Infineon have all begun touting their DDR 2 memory for Intel's upcoming Xeon DP chipset, codenamed 'Lindenhurst', just as Micron did, earlier today.
Hynix has submitted its 512Mb DDR 2 chip to Intel for official Lindenhurst validation and reports that Lindenhurst mobos will boot successfully if registered DIMMs based on its DDR 2 chips are fitted. So say Elpida - its 1Gb part is Lindenhurst-friendly, too - and Infineon.
Samsung, meanwhile, is simply saying its own 512Mb part is "ready to meet the needs of a new generation of high performance PCs and servers", making no mention of Lindenhurst per se.
All four companies are offering 400MHz and 533MHz DDR 2. Elpida's chips are available now. Samsung's parts are sampling, as are Infineon's. So too are Hynix's DDR 2 chips.
<a href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/3/32864.html" target=_blank>more here</a>
Micron today became the latest memory manufacturer to win Intel approval for the use of its DDR 2 SDRAM in the chip giant's upcoming server chipsets. It also said that it had begun shipping DIMMs to "major OEM customers".
Micron will offer 256MB and 512MB registered DIMMs based on 400MHz and 533MHz 256Mb DDR 2 chips for Intel's 'Lindenhurst' and 'Lindenhurst-VS' chipsets, Xeon DP-oriented products due for release early next year and aimed at volume and value markets, respectively.
<a href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/3/32861.html" target=_blank>more here</a>
=================================
The Reg: <a href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/3/32864.html" target=_blank>DRAM makers mass to support Lindenhurst</a>
Hynix, Samsung, Elpida and Infineon have all begun touting their DDR 2 memory for Intel's upcoming Xeon DP chipset, codenamed 'Lindenhurst', just as Micron did, earlier today.
Hynix has submitted its 512Mb DDR 2 chip to Intel for official Lindenhurst validation and reports that Lindenhurst mobos will boot successfully if registered DIMMs based on its DDR 2 chips are fitted. So say Elpida - its 1Gb part is Lindenhurst-friendly, too - and Infineon.
Samsung, meanwhile, is simply saying its own 512Mb part is "ready to meet the needs of a new generation of high performance PCs and servers", making no mention of Lindenhurst per se.
All four companies are offering 400MHz and 533MHz DDR 2. Elpida's chips are available now. Samsung's parts are sampling, as are Infineon's. So too are Hynix's DDR 2 chips.
<a href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/3/32864.html" target=_blank>more here</a>
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