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SK Hynix has announced that their GDDR6 memory will release in 2018, coming with 2x the speed of GDDR5 while operating with 10% lower voltages.

Read more on SK Hynix' GDDR6 memory.

Read more on SK Hynix' GDDR6 memory.
SK Hynix has been planning to mass produce the product for a client to release high-end graphics card by early 2018 equipped with high-performance GDDR6 DRAMs.
Basically a refined GDDR5X with a little more speed but much better voltage levels. They were able to release it pretty fast considering GDDR5x didn't come out much to long ago.
I know. All I was saying is this is a refined 5x. Which it is
It's not that great of a performance improvement over 5x. But it reduces power consumption. So thats refined in my book![]()
To be honest, I thought that that memory standard creator company (I forgot its name; I've had alcohol) didn't give anything over 5X any merit and thus favoured HBM2 more, leaning more towards NBD his arguments.
JEDEC is the one you are thinking of. And I am also sure what you say is true, that they favor HBM over GDDDR standards. Since many many companies put effort into developing this new innovative global standard to replace the aging GDDR standards.
You are over thinking what I am saying and kinda missing the point.
I'm just saying GDDR6 is not that impressive, or as impressive as you think it is. The point is it's been 9 years since any GDDR development has introduced any actual new GDDR memory chips. 5X is impressive purely from a speed perspective compared to what 5 was capable of. 6 is finally coming around, but from the perspective of just speeds, it's nothing that isn't crazy. You are comparing a new standard to a 9 year old standard. It damn well better be way faster and draw less voltage. Now comparing to just the 5X, again it's not so far away ahead of Micron. We aren't seeing faster chips because there basically is only one customer. That's why development is slow. But rest assured if HBM never entered the scene, 5X would be cheaper and faster.
Really I'm not as impressed as you are and the more I think about it, the less I get. It's been 9 years. This should be the minimum of what they could achieve. I mean sure the first 5 chips weren't all that fast, but in another 9 years, you'll say the same about the 6 due to the "6X" as an example.