
Memory is about as close as any computer component gets to being a commodity product. People rarely think about their RAM, as long as it’s enough. Memory bandwidth is critically important to PC performance, though. There’s a reason Valve upgraded the Steam Deck’s memory speed with the OLED model. LPDDR5X can get up to 10 Gbps, but according to the latest information from JEDEC, (LP)DDR6 is going to blow the current stuff out of the water.



The upshot is that the actual practical bandwidth of LPDDR6 increases by about 33% on a per-clock basis compared to LPDDR5, even after accounting for the fact that only 256 of the 288 bits in a single memory access are actual usable data. Those other 32 bits can be used for special functions that either improve the reliability of the RAM by checking and reporting for write errors, or to do Data Bus Inversion (DBI) that allows you to save a significant amount of power for writes.

But what about regular old desktop DDR6? The spec for it isn’t final yet, but JEDEC’s documents suggest that data rates for the socketable RAM could start as high as 8.8 Gbps and then scale all the way to 17.6 Gbps, or perhaps even as high as 21 Gbps. JEDEC’s notes suggest that the draft spec for DDR6 should be released this year, and then the spec should be finalized in Q2 of 2025.