- A
DIMM (Dual In-line
Memory Module) is a po****r type of
memory module used in computers. It is a
printed circuit board with one or both
sides (front and...
-
SDRAM specification, and was
itself succeeded by DDR3
SDRAM in 2007. DDR2
DIMMs are
neither forward compatible with DDR3 nor
backward compatible with DDR...
-
eight memory DIMM slots instead of the PM9500's twelve, but
other Hammerhead-based
machines such as the PM8500 also
carry only
eight memory DIMM slots. On...
- dual in-line
memory module (
DIMM), it is
called an RDIMM. Similarly, an
unregistered DIMM is
called a
UDIMM or
simply "
DIMM".
Registered memory is often...
- (18, if ECC is supported).
Multiple ranks can
coexist on a
single DIMM.
Modern DIMMs can for
example feature one rank (single rank), two
ranks (dual rank)...
-
include PCIe, mini PCIe, mini-
DIMM, MO-297, and many more. The
SATADIMM from
Viking Technology uses an
empty DDR3
DIMM slot on the
motherboard to provide...
- A
Fully Buffered DIMM (FB-
DIMM) is a type of
memory module used in
computer systems. It is
designed to
improve memory performance and
capacity by allowing...
- 8 bits/byte = 64 GB/s) of
bandwidth per
DIMM.
Rambus announced a
working DDR5 dual in-line
memory module (
DIMM) in
September 2017. On
November 15, 2018...
- (pronounced "en-vee-
dimm") or non-volatile
DIMM is a type of
persistent random-access
memory for
computers using widely used
DIMM form-factors. Non-volatile...
- DDR3
DIMM.
Because of a
hardware limitation not
fixed until Ivy Bridge-E in 2013, most
older Intel CPUs only
support up to 4-Gbit
chips for 8 GB
DIMMs (Intel's...