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Motherboard talks security and Rambus

http://www.rambusblog.com/2016/07/28/motherboard-talks-security-and-rambus/#new_tab

Motherboard’s Michael Byrne recently covered a paper written by Rambus chief scientist Paul Kocher for Communications of the ACM. In the paper, Kocher observes that computer security issues have far exceeded the limits of the human brain. To illustrate his point, the chief scientist points to Ohio’s infamous Silver Bridge, which collapsed during rush hour […]

Motherboard talks security and Rambus

https://www.rambus.com/blogs/motherboard-talks-security-and-rambus-2/

Motherboard’s Michael Byrne recently covered a paper written by Rambus chief scientist Paul Kocher for Communications of the ACM. In the paper, Kocher observes that computer security issues have far exceeded the limits of the human brain. To illustrate his point, the chief scientist points to Ohio’s infamous Silver Bridge, which collapsed during rush hour […]

What if HAL 9000 had been lensless?

http://www.rambusblog.com/2016/07/27/what-if-hal-9000-had-been-lensless/#new_tab

The fictional HAL 9000 is a sentient computer that made its infamous on-screen debut in Arthur C. Clarke’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. In the 1968 film directed by Stanley Kubrick, HAL is depicted in the form of multiple camera lenses containing a dot, which are scattered throughout the Discovery One spacecraft. According to HAL’s Legacy: […]

PAR – The good, the bad and the ugly

https://www.rambus.com/blogs/par-the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly/

In the first part of our blog series exploring EMVCo’s payment account reference (PAR), we provided an overview of the concept and explained why it has been introduced.  In this second installment, we analyse the potential impact of PAR across the payments ecosystem. Earlier this year, EMVCo introduced PAR – a ‘newly-defined data element that reduces reliance […]

What if HAL 9000 had been lensless?

https://www.rambus.com/blogs/what-if-hal-9000-had-been-lensless-2/

The fictional HAL 9000 is a sentient computer that made its infamous on-screen debut in Arthur C. Clarke’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. In the 1968 film directed by Stanley Kubrick, HAL is depicted in the form of multiple camera lenses containing a dot, which are scattered throughout the Discovery One spacecraft. According to HAL’s Legacy: […]

R+ DDR4 PHY developed on GLOBALFOUNDRIES 14nm LPP process

https://www.rambus.com/blogs/r-ddr4-phy-developed-on-globalfoundries-14nm-lpp-process-2/

Rambus has confirmed the development of its R+ DDR4 PHY on the GLOBALFOUNDRIES 14nm LPP process. “As part of a comprehensive suite of memory and SerDes interface offerings for networking and data center applications, we have achieved the first production-ready 3200 Mbps DDR4 PHY available on the power-performance optimized 14nm Low Power Plus (LPP) process,” […]

R+ DDR4 PHY developed on GLOBALFOUNDRIES 14nm LPP process

http://www.rambusblog.com/2016/07/26/r-ddr4-phy-developed-on-globalfoundries-14nm-lpp-process/#new_tab

Rambus has confirmed the development of its R+ DDR4 PHY on the GLOBALFOUNDRIES 14nm LPP process. “As part of a comprehensive suite of memory and SerDes interface offerings for networking and data center applications, we have achieved the first production-ready 3200 Mbps DDR4 PHY available on the power-performance optimized 14nm Low Power Plus (LPP) process,” […]

Rambus Announces Silicon-proven R+ DDR4 PHY on GLOBALFOUNDRIES 14nm LPP Process for Networking and Data Center Applications

https://www.rambus.com/rambus-announces-silicon-proven-r-ddr4-phy-on-globalfoundries-14nm-lpp-process-for-networking-and-data-center-applications/

Production-ready PHY IP will address the high-performance needs of enterprise systems SUNNYVALE, Calif. – July 26, 2016 – Rambus Inc. (NASDAQ:RMBS) today announced that it has developed an R+ DDR4 PHY on the GLOBALFOUNDRIES FX-14™ ASIC platform using the company’s most advanced 14nm Power Plus (LPP) process. As part of a comprehensive suite of memory […]

The growing demand for FPGAs in servers and data centers

http://www.rambusblog.com/2016/07/25/the-growing-demand-for-fpgas-in-servers-and-data-centers/#new_tab

Jeff Dorsch of Semiconductor Engineering recently noted that there are a number of distinct advantages and drawbacks to various compute engines available on the market today. “[For example], CPUs offer high capacity at low latency. GPUs have the highest per-pin bandwidth. And FPGAs are designed to be very general,” writes Dorsch. “But each also has […]

Is Computer Security Becoming a Hardware Problem?

http://motherboard.vice.com/read/is-computer-security-a-hardware-problem#new_tab

To Kocher, this is a scaling problem. While the complexity of our machines increases exponentially, the development of new, reliable security schemes has not kept pace.

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