mram articles, videos, photos and opinions

Sort by Relevance | Date | Popularity

Magnetic memory chips come to market

...released its MR2A16A chip, which the company says is the first commercial MRAM, or Magnetoresistive Random Access Memory, device. MRAM is faster than most other... Read more

11 July, 2006 by Michael Kanellos

Magnetic memory set to charge the market

...circuits while having advantages of its own. One long-term contender is MRAM, Magnetic Random Access Memory, which has been brewing in the labs for... Read more

12 February, 2003 by Rupert Goodwins

IBM and Infineon to shake up memory market?

...the effort Thursday, hope to speed development of Magnetic Random Access Memory (MRAM) chips. MRAM uses a magnetic charge -- similar to a hard drive's... Read more

7 December, 2000 by Ian Fried

Rupert Goodwins' Diary

...s come close to introducing a commercially significant new memory technology. For MRAM to become a moneyspinner, Freescale has to find an application that it... Read more

14 July, 2006 by Rupert Goodwins

Spin is the thing

...non-volatile for most purposes. IBM, Motorola and other companies have developed MRAM -- magnetic memory -- that electronically manipulates spin for storage purposes, and these can... Read more

26 September, 2003 by Rupert Goodwins

New spin on transistor heralds chip revolution

...increases in memory storage, power saving and device speed. IBM is investigating MRAM -- magnetic memory -- based on the technology, and Stanford University recently announced the... Read more

24 September, 2003 by Rupert Goodwins

IBM, Infineon show off next-gen memory progress

...could be ready for commercial production by 2005. Magnetic Random Access Memory (MRAM) combines technological principles from both the magnetic world -- the basis for the... Read more

10 June, 2003 by Michael Kanellos

Flash memory begins to fade

...hit the market by 2006. Other alternatives being developed include: magnetic RAM (MRAM), which isn't really magnetic; ferroelectric RAM (FeRAM), which involves shifting atoms... Read more

27 March, 2003 by Michael Kanellos

Flash memory?s ?midlife crisis? boosts Magnetic RAM

...could be ready for commercial production by 2005. Magnetic Random Access Memory (MRAM) combines technological principles from both the magnetic world - the basis for the... Read more

10 June, 2003 by Michael Kanellos

Magnetic memory moves on

...showed methods to cut down power consumption and size in cells of MRAM, a type of memory that may replace conventional computer memory (DRAM) and... Read more

17 December, 2004 by Michael Kanellos

Spansion sees profits in flash memory's future

The chipmaker says its 'charge-trapping' tech will save the flash industry from a Moore's Law-style crisis, as it reaches out to partners Read more

29 November, 2007 by Michael Kanellos

IBM changes directions in magnetic memory

...had been working on a more conventional type of magnetic memory called MRAM. However, the company has been having trouble shrinking the transistors on these... Read more

20 August, 2007 by Michael Kanellos

Rupert Goodwins' Diary

...s come close to introducing a commercially significant new memory technology. For MRAM to become a moneyspinner, Freescale has to find an application that it... Read more

14 July, 2006

IBM allies with Stanford for spintronics

...heads, taking advantage of these properties in 1997. Magnetic random access memory (MRAM) could become the next product where spintronics could be incorporated. Ideally, MRAM... Read more

26 April, 2004 by Michael Kanellos
3D Mini-Jetfight (Air Combat) 1.1

3D Mini-Jetfight (Air Combat) 1.1

...Each jet fighter is armed with 4 Medium-Range A/A Missiles (MRAM) and 4 Short-Range A/A Missiles (SRAM), as well as a... Read more

11 June, 2003

Get ZDNet UK's daily newsletter

Enter your email address to sign up

ZDNet UK Live

bobandroid

496,999 BT Fon Hotspots lovingly situated in your next door neighbours garden, no matter how you dress that up its still a pup... Not where I need...

14 minutes ago by bobandroid on London Olympics: BT needs 25,000 more Wi-Fi hotspots
apexwm

Jack : I was hoping you could provide us a summary since you are familiar with this report. I am not yet sure how much of my time I'd like to...

2 hours ago by apexwm on Using Windows XP is a waste of money, says IDC
Smilig Eddie

2 – 4 more weeks of waiting: how many buyers are going to decide instead to see what the iPhone 5 offers? Consumer trust in the brand has also...

2 hours ago by Smilig Eddie on Samsung Galaxy 'S3' delayed by special paint
SRist

So it looks like this was a complete red herring - Adobe are allowing upgrades from Photoshop CS3, CS4 and CS5 at the same price. When did this...

3 hours ago by SRist on Photoshop users attack Adobe upgrade policy change
Jack Schofield

@apexwm Have you considered either (a) reading the story above or (b) reading the PDF? There are answers in both.

5 hours ago by Jack Schofield on Using Windows XP is a waste of money, says IDC
apexwm

I would love to hear why Microsoft believes that "upgrading from Windows XP to Windows 7 pays for itself in a year, in increased productivity and...

5 hours ago by apexwm on Using Windows XP is a waste of money, says IDC
debsmk

I have just changed mine to white they said 3 to 5 days

6 hours ago by debsmk on Samsung Galaxy 'S3' delayed by special paint
Atangana

I would like a job for me and do good to their tackiness vellent my help I will do my best to help you mercie for all

7 hours ago by Atangana on UK's 15-year-old World Excel champion offered £100k job
BrownieBoy

Well done to IDC for producing a report that says using XP is a waste of money. Only 11 years too late with it is all....

8 hours ago by BrownieBoy on Using Windows XP is a waste of money, says IDC
Jack Schofield

@Burn-IT ...which doesn't mean it isn't true ;-) I'll be interested if you can find any properly-researched, independent data from any of the...

9 hours ago by Jack Schofield on Using Windows XP is a waste of money, says IDC
Burn-IT

As said, sponsored by Microsoft........

10 hours ago by Burn-IT on Using Windows XP is a waste of money, says IDC
mrbigdong

@620W, I mine 1 BTC/daily for cost of 1.7eur, they naysayers regurgitate the rubbish they read as usual

10 hours ago by mrbigdong on A minor Bitcoin miner injury?
Mike Denton

If the link to the next section existed that would be awesome.... Guess I have to ask uncle google where it is

14 hours ago by Mike Denton via Facebook on Security on the farm: Accounts and permissions
minzhu

Don't blame CEO, they want RIM win. RIM has strange culture and self distruct political environment. In RIM if a new hired person figure out...

16 hours ago by minzhu on RIM CEO: Time to squash BlackBerry myths
Thomas Gellhaus

I've been very pleased with Mageia 2. My review went up on Sunday. My only issue is that my particular wireless printer hasn't been detected on...

19 hours ago by Thomas Gellhaus via Facebook on Scorecard - Linux Mint 13 and Mageia 2
knapper

That we have :-) Retailers don't buy stuff to lie around in warehouses, particularly with fast moving technology products. If they didn't think...

1 day ago by knapper on Windows Phone, Android take bite out of BlackBerry
JohneKerr

I think that we have been here before, shipments are not equal to sales. Correct?

1 day ago by JohneKerr on Windows Phone, Android take bite out of BlackBerry
Iain Sutherland

I received the notification of Mageia 2 being released on Saturday, was already running Mageia 1. After running the installation X came back up...

1 day ago by Iain Sutherland via Facebook on Scorecard - Linux Mint 13 and Mageia 2
SoapyTablet

If ZTE have been selling below cost with the ZTE Blade / Orange San Francisco then given the current high street price of the Nokia Lumia 710, you...

1 day ago by SoapyTablet on Huawei, ZTE face EU 'illegal state subsidies' probe
Burn-IT

Yes it is basically down to "nobody in control understands IT, is willing to admit it, or allow decisions to be delegated". Lets get someone in who...

1 day ago by Burn-IT on 6 million wasted licences and £1,200 PCs: welcome to government IT