JEDEC Previews LPDDR6 Memory With SOCAMM2 Modules & 512 GB Capacities, Clearing the Path for Next-Gen AI Servers

JEDEC, the industry standards body that defines memory specifications, has previewed its next-generation LPDDR6 standard, introducing SOCAMM2 module form factors and capacities reaching 512 GB—developments that signal a significant leap forward for AI data centers and mobile computing.
The LPDDR6 standard builds on the foundation of LPDDR5X, offering higher bandwidth, improved power efficiency, and greater density. For AI workloads, which require massive memory capacity to train and run large language models, the jump to 512 GB capacities is particularly meaningful. Current server configurations often max out well below that threshold, creating bottlenecks that limit model size and performance.
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The SOCAMM2 module format represents a new approach to packaging memory for servers. By enabling more compact and dense configurations, SOCAMM2 allows data center operators to pack significantly more memory into the same physical footprint, reducing the need for costly hardware expansions and improving the economics of AI infrastructure.
For mobile platforms, LPDDR6 promises faster data throughput and lower power consumption—critical factors for smartphones and tablets where battery life and thermal constraints are constant challenges. The standard is expected to appear in flagship devices within the next couple of years.
The timing is significant. As AI models grow larger and demand for inference capacity surges, memory has become a critical constraint. JEDEC's preview suggests the industry is responding with purpose, designing standards that directly address the bottlenecks slowing next-generation AI deployment.
What This Means For You: If you work in tech or data infrastructure, LPDDR6 and SOCAMM2 will reshape how you spec and budget servers within a few years. For everyone else, this means faster AI features on your devices, more capable cloud services, and—eventually—better performance in everything from your phone to the apps that run on these data centers. The memory upgrade cycle is coming, and it's built for the AI era.
Originally sourced from Wccftech
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