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InternetNews September 15, 2006 David Needle |
Freescale Sold For Billions Consortium buys chip firm in mega-deal. |
The Motley Fool July 10, 2006 Seth Jayson |
Freescale Nails SanDisk? If SanDisk is dropping because of the MRAM news, the market is crazier than we think. Investors, take note. |
InternetNews September 11, 2006 Ed Sutherland |
Is Freescale on The Auction Block? A group of private equity firms reportedly has its sights on Freescale Semiconductors. |
The Motley Fool September 12, 2006 Jack Uldrich |
Rival Buyers Woo Freescale Multiple bids could drive the semiconductor company's stock even higher. Investors are wise not to get too excited before a deal is officially announced -- but they do have reasons for optimism. |
The Motley Fool October 19, 2006 Stephen Ellis |
NVE Spins Investors Dizzy Long on press releases, short on results, the company that says it holds key patents for the next generation of MRAM computer memory is spinning stories again. NVE investors need a dose of reality. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics December 2007 |
Simtek Offers Two 4-Megabit nvSRAM Memory Devices The memory chips offer benefits for emerging solid-state drives (SSDs), hard disk drives, and other system memory architectures that require the speed of SRAM, density of DRAM, and non-volatility of flash memory. |
The Motley Fool November 22, 2004 Jeff Young |
NVE's Nanotrap Only Snares Speculators NVE's stock is sizzling hot. This nano-ostensible company is hell-bent on convincing the world it holds the keys -- licensable keys -- to a high-profile memory technology for PCs, cell phones, and other gadgets. |
The Motley Fool December 18, 2006 Tim Beyers |
Naughty: NVE Not Very Exciting Businesses built solely on promises can create outrageous gains over short periods. Take NVE. Investors have bid the shares up more than 132% this year, hoping that the company's MRAM technology would see a major licensing deal with Freescale Semiconductor. |
The Motley Fool January 24, 2005 Wherrett & Yelovich |
All Dip and No Chip NVE makes routers and couplers based upon its nano-inspired "spintronics" technology. At a current share price of $23, NVE is valued at a very generous 54 times trailing-12-month earnings. |
The Motley Fool August 18, 2004 W.D. Crotty |
MRAM: The Holy Grail of Memory NVE Corporation investors are excited by the company's "spintronics" nanotechnology used for Magnetoresistive Random Access Memory (MRAM.) The stock rocketed up more than $9 a share on news it was awarded a key patent. |
InternetNews February 7, 2006 David Needle |
Freescale Climbs Aboard Power.org Freescale Semiconductor announced it has joined the Power.org to work with IBM to develop a common instruction set and move the Power architecture in to a broader set of customer implementations. |
IEEE Spectrum November 2010 Bedair et al. |
Spintronic Memories to Revolutionize Data Storage Superdense MRAM chips based on the bizarre property of electron spin could replace all other forms of data storage |
InternetNews December 3, 2004 Michael Singer |
Freescale: Split, Then Grow After more than 50 years as part of Motorola, Freescale Semiconductor is finally going it alone. |
The Motley Fool January 20, 2012 Anders Bylund |
Have You Seen This Technology Bust the Status Quo? Probably not yet, but I'm sure you will. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics March 2008 Courtney E. Howard |
Embedded Technology Burgeoning, Market Consolidating Technology companies delivering embedded solutions to military and aerospace customers, among others, are acquiring businesses entrenched in the consumer electronics markets. |
The Motley Fool June 23, 2004 Ben McClure |
Motorola Sets Freescale Loose Think twice before buying into Freescale Semiconductors and take time to carefully examine Motorola's offloading of its chip-making subsidiary. |
PC World October 2, 2006 Eric Bender |
The Future of Nanotech Ultra-small technology, revolutionary impact. |
InternetNews April 26, 2004 Michael Singer |
IBM Takes Nano Chip Design for a 'Spin' A collaboration between IBM and Stanford University could lead to reconfigurable logic devices, room-temperature superconductors and quantum computers. |
BusinessWeek November 14, 2005 Mark Morrison |
Hidden Value Let Loose Chip-maker Freescale, spun from Motorola, is a prime example of the power of spin-offs. |
The Motley Fool April 20, 2006 Tim Beyers |
Hello, Mr. Chips A breakthrough quarter may give Freescale Semiconductor the respect it deserves. This stock is at worst fairly priced, and at best really cheap. |
Wired April 2000 David Voss |
Instant Access Memory He's already set off one computer storage revolution. Now Stuart Parkin is reengineering RAM so we'll never have to boot up again. |
The Motley Fool October 20, 2006 Anders Bylund |
Freescale Fades Out in Style On the verge of going private, a promising semiconductor savant reports stunning results. Investors, take note. |
BusinessWeek November 27, 2006 |
A Dicey Win For Blackstone The bidding war over Freescale went to the private-equity powerhouse and its partners. But the chip-maker's debt load may jeopardize its future. |
The Motley Fool August 20, 2008 Anders Bylund |
Big Blue Has Intel on Its Mind International Business Machines just produced the first SRAM chip on a new 22-nanometer manufacturing process, a not-too-subtle jab at Intel, which has similar process improvements of its own under development. |
The Motley Fool March 26, 2004 W.D. Crotty |
Infineon Loses a Winner After Ulrich Schumacher had just pulled the world's third-largest DRAM maker through billions of cost cutting and straight to profitability, he resigns as the CEO of the world's No. 6 chip maker. |
InternetNews January 6, 2009 Andy Patrizio |
Freescale Tosses Its Hat in the Netbook Ring Freescale Semiconductor decides to take on Intel despite the faltering economy. |
CIO August 15, 2001 Daniel Sweeney |
New Memory Flash provided the technical foundation for today's PDAs and smart phones, but it is relatively slow compared with volatile memory and consumes considerable energy. Three next-generation technologies are currently vying for the huge Flash market... |
BusinessWeek August 26, 2010 Kelly & King |
Is Freescale Going From RIP to IPO? The chipmaker wants to go public to help pay off its $8 billion in debt. |
The Motley Fool September 12, 2006 Jack Uldrich |
In Japan, McDonald's Serves a New Chip Semiconductor and cell-phone technology converge in fast food. The news suggests Freescale Semiconductor's potential to capitalize on the value of combining RFID technology and cell phones. Investors, take note. |
InternetNews October 20, 2005 Eric Griffith |
Bluetooth at UWB Data Rate Freescale Semiconductor has demoed what it says is the first instance of high-speed ultrawideband on a Bluetooth stack. |
Technology Research News January 26, 2005 |
Magnetic Logic Becomes Practical Researchers from Stanford University have improved a way to program magnetic random access memory (MRAM) to carry out computations. |
IEEE Spectrum October 2007 Sarah Adee |
Chips Tracked in Fab by Wi-Fi Freescale Semiconductor furthers the removal of humans from the chip-making process. |
InternetNews September 28, 2004 Colin C. Haley |
Motorola To Trim 1,000 Jobs Motorola said it would cut 1,000 jobs, a move prompted by the spinout of its Freescale Semiconductor subsidiary. |
The Motley Fool August 1, 2006 Jack Uldrich |
NVE Investors' Ears Perk Up Why has the tech company's stock price suddenly soared? |
The Motley Fool July 25, 2006 Anders Bylund |
SanDisk Anything but Flat In last night's earnings report, SanDisk proved once again that it's the player to beat in the flash memory market. Shares were trading up by about 20% in after-hours action. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2006 Harry Goldstein |
GaAsing Up Cellphones Gallium arsenide transistors could power tiny, blazingly fast multimedia handsets. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics February 2010 John Keller |
Trends in microprocessors: high-end military embedded applications are beginning a shift to Intel When it comes to military embedded computing, basically only two microprocessor manufacturers slug it out for the lion's share of the defense and aerospace embedded computer market -- Freescale Semiconductor Inc. in Austin, Texas, and Intel Corp. of Santa Clara, Calif. |
The Motley Fool July 11, 2006 Jack Uldrich |
Seagate Takes a Big Byte Seagate Technology announced that it had just patented a new technology that could increase disk capacity by a factor of 10. Would-be investors might not want to get too excited over the stock's short-term boost, but this is certainly worth watching. |
Technology Research News December 11, 2002 Kimberly Patch |
Laser pulses could speed memory Researchers from the Research Institute for Materials in the Netherlands and Siemens AG in Germany have found a way to switch a magnetic bit more quickly. The potential payoff is faster computer memory. |
PC Magazine March 2, 2005 John C. Dvorak |
Inside Track v24n5 While it is not up to the current specs of today's efficient DRAM, every chip company has its eye on the potential of magnetic RAM, or MRAM. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics November 2005 |
Ada Software to Support Altivec Processor The software company is extending their GNAT Pro Ada development tool suite to support the Freescale Semiconductor Inc. AltiVec microprocessor instruction set. |
The Motley Fool September 22, 2006 Rich Smith |
Silicon Stays Strong Yesterday, as both the Nasdaq and Dow closed down 0.7% for the day, communications chipmaker Silicon Laboratories issued an earnings warning, but closed the day down less than 0.4%. What gives? |
InternetNews August 9, 2004 Roy Mark |
FCC Approves First Commercial UWB Chipset Motorola semiconductor spinoff gets the nod to begin selling its ultra wide band (UWB) product to consumer electronics makers. |
The Motley Fool July 21, 2004 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Motoring Motorola The unloved wireless player rings in a solid report. |