Samsung 96GB LPCAMM2 at 9600 MT/s Spotted in Lenovo Post
Samsung has announced HBM4 memory, and other manufacturers are nearing HBM4 validation. However, the company continues advancing other memory technologies as well.
Samsung 96GB LPCAMM2 Module Leaks With 9600 MT/s Speed
While HBM4 targets AI accelerators and data centers, Samsung is still pushing innovation in laptop memory. A Lenovo ThinkBook product manager posted a photo on Weibo showing a Samsung LPCAMM2 (LPDDR5X CAMM2) module labeled with 96GB capacity and a 9600 MT/s data rate.
According to VideoCardz, the post described the module as “dual 96” and confirmed that it has not yet entered mass production.
96GB Capacity Breaks Current LPCAMM2 Limits
The most notable detail is the 96GB capacity. Many current LPCAMM2 configurations top out at 64GB.
Samsung’s published LPCAMM2 specifications currently highlight capacities up to 64GB and speeds around 8,533 Mb/s. Micron has also referenced LPCAMM2 support for speeds up to 9,600 Mb/s, matching the speed shown on the leaked Samsung module.
If Samsung moves this 96GB 9600 MT/s configuration into mass production, it would mark a clear step forward for thin laptops and mobile workstations.
What LPCAMM2 Means for Laptops
LPCAMM2 is a removable memory standard that uses LPDDR instead of traditional DDR memory. It delivers LPDDR-level power efficiency while allowing upgrades, unlike soldered RAM.
The module mounts flat to the motherboard and aims to replace the SO-DIMM in thin and high-performance laptops. JEDEC has already standardized LPCAMM2, and vendors promote it for compact systems that require higher bandwidth and better power efficiency.
Intel Core Ultra Series 3 Platform Support
Intel documentation for Core Ultra Series 3 (Panther Lake) mobile platforms references LPDDR5X speeds reaching up to 9600 MT/s. That suggests platform readiness for such high-speed modules.
Actual supported speeds will still depend on the CPU memory controller, motherboard design, and vendor validation. A memory rating alone does not guarantee full performance in every system.
Embedded systems already use LPCAMM2 modules with up to 96GB LPDDR5X at 8,533 MT/s, which shows that high-capacity LPCAMM2 configurations are technically viable today.
Samsung is also expanding beyond LPDDR5X. The company has reportedly shipped LPDDR6X samples to Qualcomm, signaling early development of next-generation mobile memory.
Together, the 96GB LPCAMM2 module and LPDDR6X samples show that Samsung continues to invest across multiple memory segments, not just HBM4.
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