SK hynix starts mass production of 192 GB SOCAMM2

SK hynix has begun mass production of the 192 GB SOCAMM2, a next-generation memory module standard built on 1cnm LPDDR5X low-power DRAM. The module is positioned as a primary memory solution for next-generation Artificial Intelligence servers.

SK hynix has begun mass production of the 192 GB SOCAMM2, a next-generation memory module standard based on the 1cnm process (sixth-generation of the 10-nanometer technology) LPDDR5X low-power DRAM.

SOCAMM2 adapts low-power memory, which was previously used mainly in mobile products like smartphones, for server environments. The company positions the module as a primary memory solution for next-generation Artificial Intelligence servers.

The announcement centers on expanding the role of low-power DRAM beyond mobile devices and into data center infrastructure. With SOCAMM2, SK hynix is targeting server deployments that require memory designed for next-generation Artificial Intelligence workloads while using a module standard built from LPDDR5X low-power DRAM.

63

Impact Score

UK and EU Artificial Intelligence regulatory outlook for May 2026

The UK is moving ahead with targeted Artificial Intelligence measures in policing, online safety, cyber security and copyright policy, while the EU is refining how the EU Artificial Intelligence Act will apply in practice. Consultations, new offences and implementation deadlines are shaping the next phase of compliance on both sides.

Germany sets out national implementation of the Artificial Intelligence Act

Germany has published a draft law to implement the European Artificial Intelligence Act through new supervisory structures, clearer institutional responsibilities, and measures designed to support innovation. The proposal puts the Federal Network Agency at the center of enforcement while preserving sector-specific oversight in sensitive fields.

ECB warns banks about new Artificial Intelligence security risks

The European Central Bank has called major banks to an emergency meeting over cybersecurity risks tied to advanced Artificial Intelligence models. Regulators want banks to speed up security updates as newer tools make it easier to find and exploit vulnerabilities.

Contact Us

Got questions? Use the form to contact us.

Contact Form

Clicking next sends a verification code to your email. After verifying, you can enter your message.