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Rambus Announces Industry-First HBM4 Controller IP to Accelerate Next-Generation AI Workloads

btarunr

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Rambus Inc., a premier chip and silicon IP provider making data faster and safer, today announced the industry's first HBM4 Memory Controller IP, extending its market leadership in HBM IP with broad ecosystem support. This new solution supports the advanced feature set of HBM4 devices, and will enable designers to address the demanding memory bandwidth requirements of next-generation AI accelerators and graphics processing units (GPUs).

"With Large Language Models (LLMs) now exceeding a trillion parameters and continuing to grow, overcoming bottlenecks in memory bandwidth and capacity is mission-critical to meeting the real-time performance requirements of AI training and inference," said Neeraj Paliwal, SVP and general manager of Silicon IP, at Rambus. "As the leading silicon IP provider for AI 2.0, we are bringing the industry's first HBM4 Controller IP solution to the market to help our customers unlock breakthrough performance in their state-of-the-art processors and accelerators."



"As heterogenous compute architectures are implemented at an ever-increasing scale to support a wide range of workloads with tremendous amounts of data movement, it is essential that the HBM IP ecosystem continues to extend performance and deliver interoperable solutions to meet the growing needs of customers," said Arif Khan, senior group director of protocol IP marketing in the Silicon Solutions Group at Cadence. "We are pleased to see Rambus offer an interoperable HBM4 Controller IP solution to support the ecosystem alongside Cadence's leadership in HBM PHY and solutions performance once the industry transition to this new generation of HBM memory begins."

"HBM4 will represent a major advancement in memory technology for generative AI and other HPC applications," said Jongshin Shin, executive vice president and head of Foundry IP Ecosystem at Samsung Electronics. "The availability of HBM4 IP solutions will be critical to paving the path for widespread HBM4 adoption in the market and Samsung looks forward to collaborating closely with Rambus and the wider ecosystem to develop new HBM4 solutions for the AI era."

"In today's complex and fast-paced semiconductor design landscape, pre-validated IP solutions are key to achieving first-time silicon success," said Abhi Kolpekwar, vice president and general manager, Digital Verification Technology division, Siemens Digital Industries Software. "Rambus and Siemens have a long-standing and successful collaboration to help our mutual customers meet their product and business goals, and we look forward to working together to deliver a new generation of best-in-class Rambus HBM4 memory controllers verified with Siemens' high-quality Verification IP."

"HBM is a key enabling technology for AI because AI processors and accelerators need high-performance, high-density memory for the massive computational requirements of AI workloads," said Shane Rau, Research VP for Computing Semiconductors at IDC. "As AI processors and accelerators advance, they will need HBM to advance, too. Seeing HBM4 IP in the market now is a key enabling building block that will be ready for designers working on cutting-edge AI hardware."

The Rambus HBM4 Controller enables a new generation of HBM memory deployments for cutting-edge AI accelerators, graphics and HPC applications. The HBM4 Controller supports the JEDEC Spec of 6.4 Gigabits per second (Gbps). The Controller is further capable of supporting operation up to 10 Gbps providing a throughput of 2.56 Terabytes per second (TB/s) to each memory device. The Rambus HBM4 Controller IP can be paired with third-party or customer PHY solutions to instantiate a complete HBM4 memory subsystem.

Availability and More Information:
The Rambus HBM4 Controller IP is the latest addition to the Rambus leading-edge portfolio of digital controller solutions. The Controller is available for licensing, and early access design customers can engage today.

Learn more about the Rambus HBM4 Controller IP here.

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Last good thing they had was the RDram in the PS2
 
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Last good thing they had was the RDram in the PS2
RDRAM lasted for awhile, it was in the N64 too.
They also had the XDR RAM which was in the PS3(idk about any other consumer system that used it). From what I remember nobody wanted to pay licensing costs, so open standard from the industry group(JEDEC) won. I believe XDR had a lot higher bandwidth due to having octal data rate(i.e. 8 bits per clock), though the actual performance advantages over DDR were always kinda dubious? It was probably more expensive too and had other drawbacks.

It is however kinda of a pity that Rambus stopped developing new memory standards. It could have been cool to have a new PC with some new Rambus standard, they were always prioritizing very high bandwidth which ironically would work well for this AI bubble(those workloads need a lot of bandwidth).
 
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It is however kinda of a pity that Rambus stopped developing new memory standards. It could have been cool to have a new PC with some new Rambus standard, they were always prioritizing very high bandwidth which ironically would work well for this AI bubble(those workloads need a lot of bandwidth).
The HBM4 will be very fast and very expensive, which means that Rambus had a hand in developing it.

They've been JEDEC members since 2014, look what they had in their labs back then, which became (fast and expensive) DDR5 many years later:
 
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