Infineon, IBM collaborate on new memory tech
The two companies will research phase-change memory, material that retains data by changing its structure.May 23, 2005, 4:17 PM PDT
Samsung develops flash-based disk
Disks will have a capacity of up to 16GB; first disks will target sub-notebooks and tablet PCs.Photo: Samsung's solid-state disk
May 23, 2005, 2:52 PM PDT
Hynix to plead guilty to memory price fixing
update South Korean memory maker settles antitrust charges with DOJ and agrees to pay $185 million fine--the third-largest in agency history.April 21, 2005, 12:48 PM PDT
Photo: Measuring memory
Philips researchers use alternative materials to create and test "phase change memory," which would work like a CD or DVD.March 16, 2005, 11:26 AM PST
A 30-year memory problem solved?
Heat and repeat. If Royal Philips Electronics researchers are right, this is how data will be stored in the future.Photo: Measuring Memory
March 16, 2005, 11:20 AM PST
Intel to tackle flash memory card market
Reinvigorated by gains in flash memory for cell phones, Intel is planning to go after consumer electronics, card market.March 2, 2005, 5:23 PM PST
Rambus files new memory suit
Just when memory makers thought it was safe to go back into the water, Rambus files another lawsuit.January 25, 2005, 5:31 PM PST
Disk drives to stop shrinking
Gear such as MP3 players with tiny drives are all the rage, but drive makers say their platters cannot get much smaller.January 12, 2005, 4:00 AM PST
iSuppli: Memory market will stall in 2005
The year that's ending will see a whopping increase, but a slowdown is already starting to be felt, the research firm says.December 17, 2004, 12:46 PM PST
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Samsung: Memory, LCD prices to drop; sales to rise
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Intel climbs flash rankings as market dips
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Matrix's 3D memory chips target game devices
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Toshiba is taking back bad memory
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Making disk drives the star of the show
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Samsung driving forward
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Flash dims AMD's revenue outlook
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Infineon to admit DRAM price fixing
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Government finds witness in RAM price-fixing probe
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Report: Memory makers get while the gettin's good
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Maxtor drives in reverse
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Memory maker Micron back in black
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IBM, Infineon advance magnetic-memory prototype
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SanDisk releases new memory cards
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Rambus tries a new licensing angle
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Rambus files antitrust suit
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Infineon to boost memory-making capacity
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Memory
analysis & commentary
analysis & commentary
Philips researchers use alternative materials to create and test "phase change memory," which would work like a CD or DVD.
Industry watcher Jon Oltsik warns that this most basic rule of IT responsibilities is badly broken but that few people seem sufficiently exercised to fix the problem.