DDR3 Shipments to Surpass DDR2 in 2010, says Supplier
We've been seeing signs of a market shift for some time now, and by the second quarter of 2010, global DDR3 shipments will finally surpass DDR2 for the first time, says market research firm iSuppli.
According to iSuppli, DDR3 is on pace to claim 50.9 percent of the market in Q2 2010, barely edging out DDR2. But what's most impressive is that DDR3's market share sat at only 14.2 percent in Q2 2009, and just 1 percent in Q2 2008.
"DDR3 is 50 percent faster than today's dominant DRAM technology, DDR2, while using about 30 percent less power," said Mike Howard, senior DRAM analyst for iSuppli. "For PC users across the board, this means faster performance. For notebook users, it can result in longer battery life."
Claiming a little over half of the market will be just the beginning, and iSuppli forecasts DDR3 will account for 71 percent of all DRAM by the end of next year.
This shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone who has been paying attention. Both Intel and AMD fully embrace the DDR3 standard, and while DDR2 used to enjoy a pricing advantage, that gap recently closed all but completely.

Image Credit: Corsair
Tagged with: build a pc • DDR3 • Memory • ram
Filed under: News
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