Interview: Bigfoot's Killer NIC, Exposed
Since its release, the Killer NIC has garnered a reputation for being an extravagant and largely unnecessary add-on for the do-it-yourselfer. Seeking additional insight, we approached the card's designer. Read More
- Intel to sample Conroe processor in Q1 2006
- AMD pumps up notebook performance with 4000+ chip
- Toshiba ships first harddrive with perpendicular recording tech
- 17" LCD monitor prices continue to rise
- Samsung low density NAND flash price premium narrows
- Graphics card makers roll out Nvidia GeForce 7800GT cards
- Intel lowers pricing of Pentium 600 series
- Intel accelerates dual-core server roadmap
- Seagate ships 400 GByte nearline SATA harddrives
- Nvidia C51 to hit market on September 20
Infineon seeking more DRAM capacity
Source: Tom's Hardware US – Category : Miscellaneous 0 comment
In addition to its joint venture with Nanya Technology (Inotera Memories), Infineon Technologies' main partners for DRAM production have been Winbond Electronics and Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC). However, Infineon may find itself short of DRAM foundry capacity as Winbond and SMIC are shifting their focus to niche IC production, which means they do not have sufficient capacity to provide foundry services for the DRAM maker.
More here at DigiTimes .
-
Previous News Article
VIA launches VN800 mobile integrated... -
Next News Article
Nvidia warns multicore CPUs could...
React! Return to news index