The obvious concern there is that such a standard could run counter to the concept of an open design. However, Dell has gone on record multiple times saying CAMM is not proprietary. Schnell doubled down on this in a discussion with PCWorld’s Gordon Ung, in which he said JEDEC is on track to formally adopt a version of CAMM as a memory standard for future laptops.
What that means in terms of royalties remains to be seen, but according to Schnell, that’s not the focus. At the same time, his comments left open the door to some kind of compensation.
“Dell is a huge company, we don’t keep the lights on because we get royalties for a patent. We basically want to recover the cost of inventing it, and implementing it,” Schnell said.
Bringing the standard to JEDEC is a big deal. Of the nearly two dozen companies in the task group that voted on CAMM becoming a standard, Schnell says there was “unanimous approval of the 0.5 spec,” and a 1.0 spec expected to be finalized in the second half of this year. Should that happen, the first laptops to feature CAMM support based on JEDEC’s specs will arrive in 2024.
Schnell isn’t saying which specific companies voted for the spec’s approval—there are over 300 members in the JEDEC trade group, including Apple and others—only that it includes a varied mix of suppliers across OEMs, SoC firms, connector supplies, and so forward
In addition to higher memory density, CAMM should also enable higher data transfer rates to bust through the so-called “brick wall” at DDR5-6400 speeds. Plus there’s a potential benefit for cooling, depending on how it’s implemented within a laptop design.
One other benefit is dual-channel support on a single CAMM module. In theory, this should prevent laptop makers from pushing out single-channel systems, as can (and does) happen now when laptops ship with a single stick of RAM. It’s not clear if they’ll also be less inclined to ship models with the memory soldered to the motherboard, but fingers crossed that will become a thing of the past as well.