Originally posted by: Ice9
Well, RDRAM is in fact over and done with. Rambus isn't focusing on RDRAM anymore as it's been effectively killed by the collusion between memory manufacturers.
Never say never. There's medicine that was made and faced worst media exposure and government intervention, that's back in the spotlight to treat other diseases. Thalidomide being one of them (the morning sickness drug that caused the "flipper kids" [kids born with disfigured arms and legs or none at all] during the 1950's and early 60's).
What RDRAM faced wasn't the firestorm that Thaliomide caused 40 years ago.
Yes, it is the better memory, but that won't bring it back. Rambus decided to leave that be, and move forward with XDR, RASER & Redwood.
I'd never say never. When the industry hits another bottleneck, they could turn back to basic older technology for answers.
And rambus is hardly a giant. They're a tiny company with a lot of bright ideas whose technology (RDRAM) was slaughtered by a media smear campaign.
Wasn't referring to Rambus the company. I was referring to any campaign to knock down a technology/market leader, can cause a vacuum of the mundane to fill it.
Knocking down Intel (or MS) wouldn't cause the bonanza open source advocates claim, it can cause anarchy in the industry, with poorer results and
quality -- as it takes money to research/test/market successful products.
Another reason why communism couldn't work in reality -- which open source is a form of. By knocking down RDRAM, DDR took over but what we got is a memory technology that'll go the way of the dodo.
Customers *love* the fact they got memory cheaper, only now to realize they bought into another price fixing scam. But instead of acknowledging they were taken to the cleaners, they'll still adamantly claim RDRAM is bad and Rambus got it's "just deserts" (out of ignorance and/or to save face).
If Rambus could've designed the memory to their specs, all of the crap it got about it's latency, it's heat would've been gone. Compromising design for mass profit was Rambus's mistake, and the fall isn't pretty. Yet it won't be as pretty as the fall DDR proponents will face when they look at the
uniform prices of memory (despite the fact not every memory produced is equal, some cut corners but still can charge "big boy" prices, as memory is traded as a commodity).
Sometimes what's cheaper doesn't = better.