The First Computer RAM

Robert H. Dennard invented DRAM in 1968 at IBM, marking a major breakthrough in computer memory technology. His design used tiny capacitors to store data, allowing RAM to become smaller, faster, and more efficient. This invention laid the foundation for the modern memory used in computers, smartphones, and almost all digital devices today.

Year

RAM Type / Technology

Description

1947

Williams Tube

First form of RAM using CRT to store bits as electric charges.

1949

Magnetic Core Memory

Durable, reliable memory using tiny magnetic rings; dominated until 1970s.

1968

DRAM (Dynamic RAM)

Invented by Robert Dennard; stored data in capacitors, enabling higher density.

1970

Intel 1103

First commercially available DRAM chip; replaced magnetic core memory.

1970s

SRAM (Static RAM)

Faster memory storing data using flip-flops; used in CPU caches.

1980s

FPM DRAM (Fast Page Mode)

Improved DRAM allowing faster access to data in the same row.

1990

EDO DRAM (Extended Data Out)

Faster than FPM with improved data output timing.

1993

BEDO DRAM

Burst EDO, improved speed further but lost market to SDRAM.

1996

SDRAM (Synchronous DRAM)

Synchronized with the CPU clock; major speed boost over older DRAM.

1999

DDR SDRAM (DDR1)

Double Data Rate — transfers data on both clock edges; doubled bandwidth.

2003

DDR2 SDRAM

Higher clock speeds, lower power consumption, improved performance.

2007

DDR3 SDRAM

Faster, more efficient, widely used for over a decade.

2014

DDR4 SDRAM

Higher speed, lower voltage, improved reliability and density.

2020

DDR5 SDRAM

Latest mainstream RAM; double bandwidth of DDR4 with better efficiency and capacity.

Present

HBM / HBM2 / HBM3

High Bandwidth Memory used in GPUs and AI hardware, stacked vertically for extreme speed.

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