From the press release:
"The availability of these samples allows systems developers such as Intel to evaluate new features and GHz-class performance across all DIMM sockets on the motherboard with the memory controller and the processor," said Jun Kitano, director of Technical Marketing for Elpida Memory (USA). "The new DDR3 platform provides nearly twice the performance of the DDR2 architecture, and it is gaining great momentum."
Read the entire news release at Elpida Memory linked here.
Read a short article at tgdaily.com here.
Hat tip to Joe, the Wizard of Pinehurst, for the link.
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