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Samsung has quietly kicked off the 2026 hardware season with its new LPDDR6 RAM, and it’s already picked up a “2026 Innovation Award Honoree” badge.

The chip is built on Samsung Foundry’s 12 nm process and reaches speeds of up to 10.7 Gbps. On paper, that matches the peak throughput of today’s fastest LPDDR5X modules, but LPDDR6 isn’t all about raw speed. Samsung increased the I/O count, which boosts overall bandwidth, and added a new dynamic power management system that reportedly cuts power draw by roughly 21% compared to LPDDR5X. In short: similar top-end performance, noticeably better efficiency.

Samsung is also talking up improvements on the security side, with extra protections designed to keep data safe during on-device AI processing — something phones and laptops are relying on more each year.

And that’s really the point here. High-end mobile devices are turning into edge computing machines, running larger models locally instead of depending on the cloud. LPDDR6 could support that shift with faster loading for AI models, and more reliable multitasking under heavy workloads.

The efficiency gains are especially important. A 21% drop in power usage means phones can handle longer, more demanding AI sessions without killing the battery as quickly.

LPDDR6 isn’t the flashiest announcement, but it’s a foundational one. It sets the stage for the next generation of mobile performance.

It’s unclear whether upcoming Ultra flagships already on the horizon — such as Oppo’s Find X9 Ultra, Xiaomi’s 17 Ultra, Vivo’s X300 Ultra, or Samsung’s own S26 Ultra — are being tested with this new LPDDR6 technology. But some of their successors will likely adopt the faster RAM to help differentiate themselves and push the user experience even further.

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