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IEEE Spectrum January 2007 Samuel K. Moore |
Masters of Memory Swiss firm Innovative Silicon crams 5 megabytes of RAM into the space of one. Their chip is called called Z-RAM, and if it grabs even a little piece of the on-chip memory market, it will change the ground rules for microprocessor design and will quickly become a company to be reckoned with. |
IEEE Spectrum July 2010 Neil Savage |
Hynix Makes No-Capacitor DRAM Z-RAM memory design might find a spot in the competitive DRAM market |
IEEE Spectrum August 2007 Samuel K. Moore |
Z-RAM to Take on DRAM with Hynix Deal The Swiss memory company Innovative Silicon says it has struck a deal to license its technology to the No. 2 maker of standalone DRAM memory chips, Hynix Semiconductor, based in Inchon, South Korea. The technology, called Z-RAM could double the density of Hynix's memory chips. |
InternetNews December 7, 2004 Michael Singer |
IBM Perks Up Memory, Transistors The company shrinks its SRAM and adds a dash of germanium fuel to its chips. |
InternetNews October 29, 2009 |
Intel, Numonyx Invent the Memory Club Sandwich New means of stacking layers will allow for more memory density. |
IEEE Spectrum November 2011 Ahmed & Schuegraf |
Transistor Wars Rival architectures face off in a bid to keep Moore's Law alive. In May, Intel announced the most dramatic change to the architecture of the transistor since the device was invented. |
PC World March 12, 2002 James Niccolai |
Intel Shrinks Chip, Hits Milestone Prototypes of high-density chips support nearly eight times as many transistors as today's Pentium 4... |
IEEE Spectrum December 2008 Sally Adee |
The Fastest, the Smallest, and the Strangest at IEDM This year's IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting, as usual, is largely a race to the bottom |
InternetNews February 25, 2008 Andy Patrizio |
MetaRAM Bets on High-Capacity Memory Breakthrough MetaRAM debuts with high-capacity DRAM using cheaper, low-capacity chips. |
IEEE Spectrum November 2007 Samuel K. Moore |
Intel 45-Nanometer Penryn Processors Arrive Penryn chips are the result of the first fundamental redesign of the CMOS transistor |
InternetNews August 30, 2004 Michael Singer |
Intel Evolves Chipmaking Technology The company reaches a tipping point with its 90-nanometer chips, as it works to slim down to 65nm next year. |
InternetNews April 7, 2005 Michael Singer |
Intel Revs up StrataFlash The chipmaker ends a five-year production drought with a Flash memory chip for embedded devices. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2012 Rachel Courtland |
3-D Chips Grow Up In 2012, 3-D chips will help extend Moore's Law - and move beyond it. |
IEEE Spectrum November 2007 Sarah Adee |
Transistors Go Vertical The semiconductor industry fights silicon sprawl by building up, not out. Today's CMOS transistor is planar, but chip makers are exploring more power-efficient three-dimensional structures as well as a planar structure with two gates. |
InternetNews December 14, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Worldwide Chip Sales Inched Up In 2007 Weakness in DRAM was offset by strength in flash and other consumer electronics-related chipsets. |
InternetNews February 7, 2008 Andy Patrizio |
Phase Change Memory Offers Best Of Both Worlds The storage capacity of flash, the speed of DRAM in one device. So when will it come to market? |
IEEE Spectrum October 2007 Bohr et al. |
The High-k Solution Microprocessors coming out this fall are the result of the first big redesign in CMOS transistors since the late 1960s. |
IEEE Spectrum December 2012 Yu-Tzu Chiu |
Flash Memory Survives 100 Million Cycles A little heat lets flash beat typical 10 000-cycle limit |
InternetNews May 28, 2004 Michael Singer |
Oversupply Is Flip Flopping Flash and DRAM With demand expected to spike this year, some memory makers are changing the way they do business. |
The Motley Fool October 17, 2005 Dan Bloom |
NAND Flash Dazzles Investors More devices are using NAND flash -- but manufacturers' profits aren't guaranteed. Investors, take note. |
The Motley Fool February 6, 2006 Rich Duprey |
Flash in the Spansion? A weak IPO, expanding losses, and defecting management bedevil the flash memory maker. |
InternetNews January 7, 2004 Michael Singer |
Infineon Joins Flash Memory Melee The German chipmaker jumps into a profitable but potentially volatile market that is teeming with competitors. |
The Motley Fool August 30, 2004 Rich Duprey |
Profiting From Moore's Law Intel develops a new chip that roughly doubles the number of transistors on a chip. Whether it's in the chip makers themselves, or in the picks and shovels of the industry, investors stand to make big profits from tiny chips. |
The Motley Fool October 31, 2007 Anders Bylund |
Silicon Motion Sidesteps Memory Shortages Investing in memory chip demand with companies such as Silicon Motion, without investing in memory makers, can be a wise way to play this segment. Investors, take note. |
InternetNews December 10, 2008 Andy Patrizio |
We Can Compete in HPC, Say Chip Vendors Despite complaints that x86 chips can't scale properly for high performance computing, Intel and AMD say they have solutions in the works. |
InternetNews February 17, 2004 Michael Singer |
Big Blue Tweaks Chip Contender IBM's new 970FX combines three different technologies for its next generation PowerPC. Apple is cheering. Intel and AMD had better watch out. |
Technology Research News February 9, 2005 |
Silicon nanocrystal transistor shines A nanocrystal field-effect light-emitting device (FELED) could be used to integrate light sources on computer chips. This would allow the light sources and control circuits of display and communications device to be fabricated together, making for a faster, cheaper manufacturing process. |
InternetNews January 27, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Intel Breakthrough Keeps Moore's Law on Track Intel dispenses with silicon for the first time in 40 years in its effort to make smaller, faster and less power-hungry chips. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2006 Guizzo & Goldstein |
Expressway To Your Skull PlayStation 3's ability to blast data between chips is one of the secrets to a mind-bending gaming experience. Sony has a lot staked on the success of the PS3 -- hundreds of millions of dollars, and maybe its future as the preeminent maker of consumer electronics. |
The Motley Fool January 29, 2007 Jack Uldrich |
IBM and Intel Install a New Gatekeeper Changes to transistor components will keep Moore's Law running smoothly. Which companies stand to come out on top? Investors, take note. |
PC World October 19, 2001 Sumner Lemon & Martyn Williams |
Memory Prices Continue Freefall PC vendors, users stock up while prices are low. |
Technology Research News November 17, 2004 Eric Smalley |
Nanomechanical Memory Demoed Several research teams have designed nanomechanical memory cells based on carbon nanotubes or buckyballs that could lead to extraordinarily fast, ultrahigh capacity computer memory. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2012 Rachel Courtland |
Start-up Seeks New Life for Planar Transistors SuVolta is pursuing precision doping in its bid to compete with 3-D transistor technology |
PC Magazine August 30, 2006 John C. Dvorak |
Inside Track v25n16 There needs to be something besides high-end games that can suck up all the power of Intel's dual-core chips. This desperation will only get worse when Intel rolls out the four-core chip. |
IEEE Spectrum September 2010 David Lammers |
Resistive RAM Gains Ground Faith in phase-change memory falters |
BusinessWeek April 3, 2006 |
The Father of Flash When Fujio Masuoka invented the flash-memory chip at Toshiba in the '80s, he launched the Digital Era. |
The Motley Fool December 11, 2006 Jack Uldrich |
IBM Stretches Its Memory By stretching memory technology to new levels, IBM is ensuring that it won't be forgotten by Wall Street anytime soon. |
InternetNews November 28, 2007 |
Samsung Predicts End of DRAM Oversupply Samsung Electronics said the oversupply of memory chips used in personal computers was expected to ease in 2008 as growing demand for portable gadgets prompts a shift in production to Flash chips. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2009 Sally Adee |
Thanks for the Memories Laptops, workstations, PlayStations, iPhones -- they would all be impossible without Robert Dennard's invention of DRAM |
PC World January 15, 2002 Tom Spring |
Memory Prices Double Watch out: DRAM prices surge after languishing and are expected to jump higher... |
InternetNews December 13, 2004 Michael Singer |
Chipmakers Advance Transistor Technology IBM and AMD have devised a new silicon transistor technology they claim will boost the speeds of single- and dual-core chips. |
IEEE Spectrum October 2006 Brian R. Santo |
Acronym Addiction When you live on the cutting edge of technology, there are, literally, no words to describe it. Instead we have acronyms. Lots and lots of acronyms. ABT... BEOL... CSP... etc. |
The Motley Fool July 24, 2006 Dan Bloom |
Spansion's Loss Contracts The flash memory maker sees revenues exceed expectations as losses narrow. If it's able to deliver on its multichip ORNAND memory package, Spansion may yet make an interesting investment. |
InternetNews October 12, 2004 Michael Singer |
AMD, Fujitsu Fab Shifts to Memory AMD has decided to cease production on its logic chips in favor of its memory processors. |
The Motley Fool September 27, 2011 Arunava De |
IBM 2 Steps Closer to Making Serious Money on Chips With the removal of major hurdles, IBM scientists can now look forward to the next-generation memory chip. |
Chemistry World December 10, 2009 Simon Hadlington |
Flexible organic flash memory Researchers have succeeded in making an elusive component of organic electronics: a flash memory transistor that can be incorporated into a thin, flexible plastic sheet. |
InternetNews April 3, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Spansion Has Single-Chip Flash For Cellular Flash memory developer Spansion has combined three of its memory architectures onto one die, which will mean lower power consumption and expanded memory for cell phones. |
InternetNews March 3, 2005 Michael Singer |
Intel Seeks a Bigger Slice of the Memory Market The company redoubles its efforts around flash and FB-DIMM memory. |
InternetNews November 11, 2008 Andy Patrizio |
IBM's Advanced Chip Fab Available for Hire Got a cutting edge chip and no one can manufacture it? IBM might have the solution for you with its 45nm foundry. |
The Motley Fool February 9, 2009 Anders Bylund |
Profitable Poetry In Silicon Motion Net profits and strong new sub-markets add up to a bright future for the computer memory market in Taiwan. |