Data storage companies Toshiba and SanDisk announced a new flash memory chip designed to address the growing use of large media files
Published:
11 February 2005 y., Friday
Data storage companies Toshiba and SanDisk announced a new flash memory chip designed to address the growing use of large media files.
The joint development partnership has produced a chip that accommodates 8-gigabits (Gb) of storage. Made using 70-nanometer (nm) process technology, the computer memory chip is based on a NAND design, which makes it suitable for storing music, video and other data. Toshiba and SanDisk said products based on their new flash memory technology should start rolling out this summer.
The companies said the 8Gb chip will become "the production workhorse" for the joint venture between Toshiba and SanDisk. At a size of 146-millimeters, the 8Gb chip has a density of 6 billion bits or 3 billion transistors per square centimeter (20 billion transistors per square inch of silicon). The companies said they also plan to commercialize a 16Gb NAND flash memory component that stacks two of the 8Gb NAND flash memories in a single package.
The new NAND flash memory chip uses multi-level cell technology that lets two bits of data be stored in one memory cell - in effect doubling the memory capacity. The circuit design is less than 5 percent larger than the previous generation 4Gb chip on 90-nanometer. Toshiba and SanDisk said they also increased the speed at which the chip writes data with a combination of burst mode techniques and high read bandwidth.
Production of the chip falls right in-line with Toshiba's previously announced roadmap and is designed to compete against the largest flash memory producer, Samsung.
Šaltinis:
internetnews.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The European Commission announced today the award of three of the six contracts for the procurement of Galileo’s initial operational capability.
more »
GERMANY TO INVEST 40 MILLION EUROS A YEAR IN COOPERATION WITH RUSSIA IN THE FIELD OF SCIENCE AND EDUCATION
more »
Belarus on 1 February inaugurated broadcasts of its first satellite-television channel, Belarus-TV
more »
RUSSIA VIEWS KAZAKHSTAN AS POTENTIAL PARTNER IN ISS ENLARGEMENT
more »
The world has got its first look at the surface of the Saturnian moon Titan with European space probe Huygens beginning to send breathtaking pictures
more »
CES 2005: This is going to cause unhappiness
more »
Saturn's first probe to land 'with a thump or a squelch'
more »
RUSSIAN STUDENTS FOR MORE CHANCE TO GET TO GERMANY, PROMISES CHANCELLOR SCHROEDER
more »
While it doesn't aspire to be a consulting company, Cisco Systems Inc. does think it can show enterprises how to transform their networks to deliver new, intelligent services that can help them build their businesses and improve productivity.
more »
A three-day global information communication technologies conference, “Digital Divide and Knowledge Economy: Problems and Solutions”, started at the Gulustan Palace of Baku on Thursday
more »
Internet technologies promise to soon take couch potatoes to worlds far beyond TiVo
more »