News

The increasing integration of NOR Flash memory in the automotive sector highlights a pivotal development in the advancement ...
1. Flash memory comes in a range of form factors, including SecureDigital (a), MicroSD (b), Sony Memory Stick (c), Compact Flash (d), and mSATA (e). They typically employ NAND flash storage.
Ver. 4.1 memory and storage devices are built for the next-generation of automotive applications. TL;DR: KIOXIA has launched ...
Flash memory devices use two different logical technologies — NOR and NAND — to map data. NOR flash provides high-speed random access, reading and writing data in specific memory locations; it ...
3D flash memory employs a different cell architecture than 2D floating gate that improves reliability and performance. 2D floating-gate memory utilizes a trench cell architecture, whereas 3D flash ...
The 2020 Flash Memory Summit included interesting announcements on NVMe and NVMe-oF as well as ethernet-based SSDs, increasing use of QLC NAND flash, new embedded MRAM announcements and even an ...
Flash memory in enterprise applications is enabling new capabilities in enterprise storage and is an enabler of cloud storage offerings. The use of flash memory is the driving force for higher ...
Flash memory has proven to be the most disruptive storage technology of the past few years. It is significantly faster, with lower latencies than mechanical spinning disk drives. This supports an ...
High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) is the commonly used type of DRAM for data center GPUs like NVIDIA's H200 and AMD's MI325X. High Bandwidth Flash (HBF) is a stack of flash chips with an HBM interface.
Macronix, one of the world's largest producers of flash memory, has produced a new kind of flash memory that can survive more than 100 million program/erase (PE) cycles -- most likely long enough ...
Yesterday, I wrote about the problems facing makers of traditional NAND flash memory, the kind of storage we use in our smartphones, tablets, and SSDs. Flash memory has grown tremendously over the ...
Historically, flash memory’s major disadvantage has been price: in 2002, it cost about $260 per gigabyte, compared with $150 per gigabyte for a comparable one-inch “microdrive” hard drive.