Synchronous Dynamic Random Access Memory Stocks List

Synchronous Dynamic Random Access Memory Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Apr 26 MU Intel CEO confident in its AI future after posting soft guidance
Apr 26 MU Micron (MU) Secures $6.1B for Domestic Manufacturing Expansion
Apr 26 MU Japan to expand export curbs on chips, quantum technology - report
Apr 25 MU Biden Keeps Doling Out Billions to Chipmakers. Here’s What Really Matters.
Apr 25 MU Why Micron Technology Stock Bucked the Market Downtrend on Thursday
Apr 25 MU Biden bets big on Idaho chips—of the semiconductor variety
Apr 25 MU Micron's $6.1B CHIPS Act Funding Propels Major Expansion In US
Apr 25 MU I'm Upgrading Micron To A Buy As It Wins The HBM Yield Race With SK Hynix
Apr 25 MU Micron wins ~$6.1B CHIPS Act grant to build three new fabs
Apr 25 MU Micron, Biden-Harris Administration, U.S. Senate Majority Leader Schumer Announce $6.1B in CHIPS and Science Act Funding for Historic Planned Investment in Domestic Leading-Edge Memory Manufacturing in Idaho and New York
Apr 25 MU Biden to announce preliminary deal with Micron for up to $6.14 billion in chip grants
Apr 25 MU As Biden celebrates computer chip factories, voters wait for the promised production to start
Apr 25 MU Biden has a favorite stop when he hits the road: chipmaking plants
Apr 25 MU Micron Clinches Total of up to $13.6 Billion in US Grants, Loans
Apr 25 MU Micron Gets $6.1 Billion to Build Three New Facilities
Apr 24 MU Micron: CHIP Grants Are Rocket Fuel (Rating Upgrade)
Apr 23 MU Why BigBear.ai, Super Micro Computer, Arm Holdings, and Other Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks Surged on Tuesday
Apr 23 MU Micron Technology Stock Has 37% Upside, According to 1 Wall Street Analyst
Apr 22 MU Top 5 U.S. Giants at Lucrative Valuations Amid April Turmoil
Apr 22 MU Micron, Uber And A Consumer Products Giant On CNBC's 'Final Trades'
Synchronous Dynamic Random Access Memory

Synchronous dynamic random-access memory (SDRAM) is any dynamic random-access memory (DRAM) where the operation of its external pin interface is coordinated by an externally supplied clock signal. DRAM integrated circuits (ICs) produced from the early 1970s to mid-1990s used an asynchronous interface, in which input control signals have a direct effect on internal functions only delayed by the trip across its semiconductor pathways. SDRAM has a synchronous interface, whereby changes on control inputs are recognised after a rising edge of its clock input. In SDRAM families standardized by JEDEC, the clock signal controls the stepping of an internal finite state machine that responds to incoming commands. These commands can be pipelined to improve performance, with previously started operations completing while new commands are received. The memory is divided into several equally sized but independent sections called banks, allowing the device to operate on a memory access command in each bank simultaneously and speed up access in an interleaved fashion. This allows SDRAMs to achieve greater concurrency and higher data transfer rates than asynchronous DRAMs could.
Pipelining means that the chip can accept a new command before it has finished processing the previous one. For a pipelined write, the write command can be immediately followed by another command without waiting for the data to be written into the memory array. For a pipelined read, the requested data appears a fixed number of clock cycles (latency) after the read command, during which additional commands can be sent.
SDRAM is widely used in computers. Beyond the original SDRAM, further generations of double data rate RAM have entered the mass market – DDR (also known as DDR1), DDR2, DDR3 and DDR4, with the latest generation (DDR4) released in the second half of 2014.

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