DDR5 RAM IS HERE

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Adata is planning on bringing its first DDR5 DRAM module to CES 2021, the tech show taking place virtually next week. The new module would represent another step towards widespread adoption of the next-generation memory standard, and would see Adata ready for the first products with DDR5 support, perhaps even Intel Alder Lake chips later this year.

Adata has also slipped mention of a next-generation DDR5 module, with speeds 'up to' 8,400MT/s.

"The future of DRAM is here in the form of the ADATA DDR5 DRAM module," Adata says in a press release. "Compared to its predecessors, this module will provide a significant speed boost, higher capacities, and reduced power consumption and increased bandwidth per CPU cores. The new DDR5 module will offer up to four times higher capacities, reduced power consumption to 1.1V, and speeds of up to 8400MT/s."

We're unlikely see a module of 8,400MT/s calibre quite yet, however. Adata is a fabless memory manufacturer, and that means it'll be relying on another's fabs to produce its chips. From that lot, we know Micron and SK Hynix intend to launch with speeds closer to 4,800-5,600MT/s at first with faster speeds arriving over the coming years. 

That means the initial wave of DDR5 RAM, expected to arrive in earnest in the latter half of 2021, may not run at faster speeds than some high-end DDR4 kits today. Yet DDR5 has other benefits over today's widely-used RAM sticks.

While perhaps not of great consideration for gamers, you can also expect higher capacities per DRAM chip with DDR5. That's a little more pivotal for use within servers—Intel and AMD are both said to be bringing DDR5 support with their next-gen datacentre chips.

DDR5 also incorporates EEC support, or Error Correction Code. That's usually reserved for servers and workstations right now, but soon it will make its way into even gaming PCs en masse, perhaps pleasing Linux creator Linus Torvalds in the process.

As for gaming performance, faster memory has proven itself an important consideration in any gaming PC build. Yet to harness DDR5, we'll need compatible processors in our rigs. These could be on the way this year, as Intel Alder Lake is tipped to arrive with the new memory standard, alongside a new hybrid architecture design and socket. 

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