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ADATA Shows New CAMM Notebook Memory: Lower Power and Latency

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ADATA has now released introductory information about the new CAMM notebook memory on its website. Officials say it has a thinner profile, lower power consumption, and lower latency than current notebook memory.

According to officials, the new CAMM memory features a new architectural design that is 57 percent thinner than today’s memory, plus it consumes less power and has higher storage efficiency.

ADATA said that this memory is designed for laptops and small industrial computers, with no slowdown when the system is fully loaded, lower latency compared to DIMM memory of the same specification, and support for LPDDR memory.

JEDEC committee member and Dell senior engineer Tom Schnell said earlier this year that JEDEC is developing a new notebook memory specification to replace the SO-DIMM memory standard that has been in use for 25 years. Dell first built CAMM memory, the first used in the Precision 7770 mobile workstation. The first CAMM memory was built by Dell and first used in the Precision 7770 mobile workstation,

The first JEDEC CAMM memory modules should be available when SO-DIMM memory reaches 6400 MT/s, replacing SO-DIMMs, according to previous sources.

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