Micron Drops Phase-Change Memory - for Now
Peter Clarke, Electronics360
January 8, 2014
Micron Technology Inc. (Boise, Idaho) has stopped actively selling phase-change memory (PCM) chip but says it still plans to re-enter the market at some point in the future.
The company has removed the 128-Mbit 90nm serial and parallel NOR pin-out PCM devices from the products listed on its website. The company also developed a 45nm 1-Gbit PCM memory that it supplied to Nokia for inclusion in mobile phones although that is not thought to have been offered as a standard product for general sale.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- Hyper-Bandwidth Multichannel Memory Subsystem
- Fault Tolerant DDR2/DDR3/DDR4 Memory controller
- Flash Memory LDPC Decoder IP Core
- HYPERBUS™ Memory Controller
- High Bandwidth Memory 3 (HBM3/3E) IP optimized for Samsung SF4X
Related News
- eASIC Completes Tapeout of 0.13 micron Configurable Platform
- SanDisk sues Micron for infringement of flash patent
- eASIC Announces Implementation of Its Configurable Logic Core in UMC's 0.15 Micron Process
- eASIC Completes Implementation of Its Configurable Logic Core In TSMC 0.18 Micron Process
Latest News
- ASICLAND Partners with Daegu Metropolitan City to Advance Demonstration and Commercialization of Korean AI Semiconductors
- SEALSQ and Lattice Collaborate to Deliver Unified TPM-FPGA Architecture for Post-Quantum Security
- SEMIFIVE Partners with Niobium to Develop FHE Accelerator, Driving U.S. Market Expansion
- TASKING Delivers Advanced Worst-Case Timing Coupling Analysis and Mitigation for Multicore Designs
- Efficient Computer Raises $60 Million to Advance Energy-Efficient General-Purpose Processors for AI