By submitting this form, you are agreeing to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
For the purpose of remote data storage and computation, a data centre is a physical building complex—or even just a single room—that holds servers, switches, CPUs, routers, cooling systems, and a lot of high-speed cabling.
In the data centre, the servers are connected by a network. The fundamental components of a cloud system, whether private or public, are data centres: Through the Internet or other network connections, users can access the data centre.
Data centres can be expanded with more powerful, modernised equipment and greater floor space because they are physical infrastructure. However, expanding them costs money and there may not be enough room.
Private data centres emerged from the necessity for server farm consolidation in the semiconductor industry and other sectors. “A small number of data centres now house the server farms that were previously maintained at each design centre.
Global data center memory interface market accounted for $XX Billion in 2022 and is anticipated to reach $XX Billion by 2030, registering a CAGR of XX% from 2023 to 2030.
According to a recent announcement from Samsung Electronics, the company has created a new DRAM (Dynamic Random Access memory) memory technology based on the Compute Express Link (CXL) connection standard that can improve data centres’ performance.
Samsung introduced the first Double Data Rate 5 (DDR5) DRAM memory module in the market, which supports the cutting-edge CXL interface.
Samsung claims that their CXL-based DRAM module may increase its memory capacity to the terabyte capacity while lowering system latency, in contrast to conventional DDR-based memory, which has constrained memory channels.
As on-ramp bridge interfaces to emerging memory interface technologies like Gen-Z, which incorporates routable fabric support, near-memory interface technologies can be used.
Far-memory pools that can be shared up to the rack level are supported by Gen-Z. At server cluster scale all the way up to Warehouse Scale Computer (WSC) data centre scale, simultaneous and shared access to pools of distant memory can significantly improve the performance of data-centric computing, real-time analytics performance, HPC and machine learning applications.
In order to scale memory bandwidth and availability to meet the demands of data-hungry applications, significant innovations in memory infrastructure are being developed.
As a leader in technology, we provide products like the SMC 1000 Smart Memory Controller to help you stay up with these developments.