GDDR Does Math, Big-Screen Explosions
By Gary Hilson, EETimes (August 23, 2023)
The “G” in GDDR stands for “graphics” (as in “graphics double data rate”), but today, the use cases for the high-performance memory boil down to math. It is the reason GDDR7, recently announced by Samsung Electronics, will find its way into high-performance computing (HPC), artificial-intelligence and automotive applications.
Graphics applications rely a great deal on matrix algebra, Jim Handy, principal analyst at Objective Analysis, said in an interview with EE Times. GDDR and GPUs are well-suited for matrix algebra. And because it is required for many AI workloads, GDDR DRAM has found itself supporting more than just graphics, he said.
![]() |
E-mail This Article | ![]() |
![]() |
Printer-Friendly Page |
Related News
Breaking News
- Arteris Wins Two Gold and One Silver Stevie® Awards in the 2025 American Business Awards®
- Faraday Adds QuickLogic eFPGA to FlashKit‑22RRAM SoC for IoT Edge
- Xylon Introduces Xylon ISP Studio
- Crypto Quantique announces QRoot Lite - a lightweight and configurable root-of-trust IP for resource-constrained IoT devices
- BOS Semiconductors to Partner with Intel to Accelerate Automotive AI Innovation
Most Popular
- Andes Technology and Imagination Technologies Showcase Android 15 on High-Performance RISC-V Based Platform
- TSMC Unveils Next-Generation A14 Process at North America Technology Symposium
- Synopsys and TSMC Usher In Angstrom-Scale Designs with Certified EDA Flows on Advanced TSMC A16 and N2P Processes
- Certus Semiconductor Joins TSMC IP Alliance Program to Enhance Custom I/O and ESD Solutions
- M31 Collaborates with TSMC to Advance 2nm eUSB2 IP Innovation