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  2. Danby (appliances) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danby_(appliances)

    Danby is the brand name of a line of appliances marketed by Danby Appliances Inc. and Danby Appliances Ltd., led by President and CEO Jim Estill. [1] Danby specializes in designing, manufacturing, and distributing small appliances through national and independent retailers in Canada, the US, UK, and Mexico. [2]

  3. DDR SDRAM - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DDR_SDRAM

    DDR SDRAM specification was finalized by JEDEC in June 2000 (JESD79). [9] JEDEC has set standards for the data rates of DDR SDRAM, divided into two parts. The first specification is for memory chips, and the second is for memory modules. The first retail PC motherboard using DDR SDRAM was released in August 2000. [10]

  4. Dynamic random-access memory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynamic_random-access_memory

    Double data rate SDRAM (DDR SDRAM or DDR) was a later development of SDRAM, used in PC memory beginning in 2000. Subsequent versions are numbered sequentially (DDR2, DDR3, etc.). DDR SDRAM internally performs double-width accesses at the clock rate, and uses a double data rate interface to transfer one half on each clock edge. DDR2 and DDR3 ...

  5. Double data rate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_data_rate

    DDR SDRAM operating with a 100 MHz clock is called DDR-200 (after its 200 MT/s data transfer rate), and a 64-bit (8-byte) wide DIMM operated at that data rate is called PC-1600, after its 1600 MB/s peak (theoretical) bandwidth. Likewise, 12.8 GB/s transfer rate DDR3-1600 is called PC3-12800. Some examples of popular designations of DDR modules:

  6. DDR2 SDRAM - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DDR2_SDRAM

    In DDR SDRAM, the prefetch length was two bits for every bit in a word; whereas it is four bits in DDR2 SDRAM. During an access, four bits were read or written to or from a four-bit-deep prefetch queue. This queue received or transmitted its data over the data bus in two data bus clock cycles (each clock cycle transferred two bits of data).

  7. LPDDR - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LPDDR

    Data is accessed in bursts of either 16 or 32 transfers (256 or 512 bits, 32 or 64 bytes, 8 or 16 cycles DDR). Bursts must begin on 64-bit boundaries. Since the clock frequency is higher and the minimum burst length longer than earlier standards, control signals can be more highly multiplexed without the command/address bus becoming a bottleneck.

  8. DDR4 SDRAM - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DDR4_SDRAM

    Double Data Rate 4 Synchronous Dynamic Random-Access Memory (DDR4 SDRAM) is a type of synchronous dynamic random-access memory with a high bandwidth ("double data rate") interface. Released to the market in 2014, [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] it is a variant of dynamic random-access memory (DRAM), some of which have been in use since the early 1970s, [ 5 ...

  9. DDR3 SDRAM - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DDR3_SDRAM

    This is twice DDR2's data transfer rates (400–1066 MT/s using a 200–533 MHz I/O clock) and four times the rate of DDR (200–400 MT/s using a 100–200 MHz I/O clock). High-performance graphics was an initial driver of such bandwidth requirements, where high bandwidth data transfer between framebuffers is required.