RDRAM is like One Flew Over The Cukoos Nest.... When you're young and stupidly liberal, you root for Jack Nicholson's character. When you get older, you see that Nurse Ratched was justified and Jack was the asshole.
Yes, Intel and RDRAM tried to monopolize the market, but we all would have been better off today had they succeeded.
The memory conglomerate (or whatever they call themselves - Jedec?) proceeded to deceive the public with their false advertising for decades to boost sales. DDR is the same speed as SDR, but it transfers data at both the rising and falling edges, we call it DDR- 266 (read: 133Mhz). Fast forward to DDR2, lithography then improves, we can make RAM faster regardless of the technology used in the RAM, now we deceive you further by introducing it's speed in the thousands (you're not buying puny 133Mhz SDRAM anymore, now you're buying PC2-4200)... The review sites further gaslit you by telling you that PC2-4200 is actually only 533Mhz (also a lie, the bus clock is 266Mhz, and the "MT/s" is 533,) and that the PC2-4200 number is so that stupid people could subsidize you - the professional - but the RAM chips internal clock is still only 133Mhz (and you are actually also stupid and are subsidizing the snob technocrats with their mansions in Silicon Valley and the Taiwan elite).
Now I KNOW that it is still a lot faster, but industries shouldn't confuse people with invented nomenclatures. RAM should be advertised by internal clockspeed, and to hell with the other improvements in other subsystems that further enhance performance.
Another thing to consider is that GDDR and GDDR2 have insanely high failure rates (GPU vendors needed fast RAM for their cutting edge GPU silicon and the technology just wasn't there, so reputable memory manufacturers pushed it and sold inherently faulty chips - The GeForce 2 GTS is a prime example of this but this extends all the way to the GeForce FX, or until GDDR3 thankfully arrived which solved the issue) and are responsible for the vast majority of failures in retro GPUs. Had RDRAM succeeded, there would be a lot more retro GPUs out there in the market today.
Public technology consortiums have run their course and R&D should be returned to the private sector.
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