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Yesterday β€” 27 March 2026Main stream

Google TurboQuant tech could save us from the RAMpocalypse

Google may have saved everyone from the RAMpocalypse Finally, we have some good news from the AI space. Google has announced new tech that has sent the stock prices of memory companies lower. Why? Google’s new β€œTurboQuant” tech promises to reduce AI’s memory usage by 6x. This tech could cause the AI industry’s demand for […]

The post Google TurboQuant tech could save us from the RAMpocalypse appeared first on OC3D.

Before yesterdayMain stream

G.Skill showcases DDR5-10000 speeds with Intel Core Ultra 270K PLUS CPU

G.Skill pushes its memory speeds past 10K with Intel’s latest CPUs G.Skill has confirmed that its DDR5 memory kits are ready for Intel’s new Core Ultra 200S PLUS CPUs (see our review here). This includes support for G.Skill’s standard DDR5 (DIMM) modules and their CU-DIMM XMP 3 memory kits. G.Skill has noted that many of […]

The post G.Skill showcases DDR5-10000 speeds with Intel Core Ultra 270K PLUS CPU appeared first on OC3D.

Micron Ships Out the β€œWorld’s First” 256GB SOCAMM2 Modules Targeted Toward the Agentic AI Frenzy

3 March 2026 at 19:34

A close-up of a circuit board featuring Micron SOCAMM2 and LPDDR5X memory chips.

Micron's latest breakthrough in the memory industry is the debut of the more capable SOCAMM2 memory modules, featuring leading capacity and power efficiency. Micron's Newer SOCAMM2 Focuses On Reducing Bottlenecks With KV-Cache, Leading to Lower Latency Workloads With the 'applications' layer of AI, the memory bottleneck is growing as workloads continue to scale, which is why DRAM manufacturers have paid special attention to advancements being made with HBM and other AI-specific memory products. In Micron's latest announcement, the firm has set a "new benchmark" with SOCAMM2 memory modules, as they ramp up the per-module capacity to 256 GB, marking a […]

Read full article at https://wccftech.com/micron-ships-out-the-worlds-first-256gb-socamm2-modules/

The U.S. Moves Once Again to Ban Chinese Memory; CXMT & YMTC Could Soon Be Banned from Several Government Devices

2 March 2026 at 22:01

A display featuring CXMT LPDDR5X and DDR5 chips highlights specifications such as '12/16Gb' capacity and '10667 Mbps' speed.

The US is working on legislation targeting Chinese memory suppliers, and according to a new proposed 'rulemaking', the use of YMTC and CXMT could be banned for government products. YMTC, SMIC & CXMT Are Now Targeted In a Proposed Legislation, Limiting Their Adoption Across Commercial Products The debate over integrating Chinese memory into consumer-grade products has emerged recently amid DRAM shortages. The 'Big 3' suppliers are currently busy with enterprise demand, leaving little capacity behind for consumer products. However, one of the major factors hindering the likes of CXMT from supplying DRAM chips to mainstream manufacturers is US legislation, and […]

Read full article at https://wccftech.com/the-u-s-moves-once-again-to-ban-chinese-memory/

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