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The CompactFlash Association has announced a new memory card format called XQD, which is slightly bigger than the standard SD card and can provide write speeds of 125MB/sec or higher.
Specification of the new memory card is based on the PCI Express specification, which is designed to provide a solid base for future performance issues.
Measuring 38.5 x 29.8 x 3.8 mm, the card is bigger than the standard SD cards which are used in many digital cameras. According to the CFA claims the new card is also durable and robust.
At the moment, the standard memory card format for professional and top-end cameras is the Compact Flash card, which is capable of higher read and write speeds than SD cards, which are more commonly found in enthusiast and beginner DSLRs and many compact cameras.
At the moment, it's not known when exactly the new cards will be available on the market, but the Association has said it will license the design in early 2012, with backing coming from both Nikon and Canon.
Mr Shigeta Kanda from Canon, who is chairman of the Compact Flash Association said, "The XQD format will enable further evolution of hardware and imaging applications, and widen the memory card options available to CompactFlash users such as professional photographers."
For those keen to take a look at the new cards, the CFA said they will be shown at its booth at the CP+ 2012 show taking place in February in Yokohama, Japan.
The Compact Flash Association is an organisation that was set up in 1995 by a group of international companies with the goal of creating industry standard flash-based memory cards for the imaging, video and industrial markets.
Semiconductor company Micron unveiled its prototype ultra-fast Hybrid Memory Cube (HMC) DRAM during the Hot Chips conference at Stanford University.
The prototype memory uses a process similar to 3D processors to stack vertically connected memory chips, which in turn allows them to function at 128GBps.
That's a truly mind-boggling speed, bearing in mind today's fastest DDR3 sticks can only manage a mere 12.8 GBps.
Micron reckons the HMC chips can function at 20 times the bandwidth of today's DDR3, and could even reach speeds of up to 160 GBps.
The chips will also operate at a mind-boggling 3.2 billion 32-byte requests per second.
If that's not enough, the modules will consume just 10 per cent of the energy per bit that current DDR3 chips use.
Staying true to its name, Micron also said that the chips will require 90 per cent less space, which could be a boon for mobile devices and laptops.
There's no word on a release date yet, and it could take Micron several years to perfect the chips - but even if it can deliver half of what it's promised, it could lead to a revolution in RAM.
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Labels: 128GBps, crazy-fast, Memory, Micron, prototypes