AI is driving demand and higher prices for DRAM and NAND into 2026. Products using non-volatile memories to replace NOR and SRAM in embedded applications are growing.
Mouser Electronics, Inc. announced the availability of Cypress’ parallel FRAM non-volatile memory featuring advanced high-reliability ferroelectric process and superior to battery-backed SRAM modules.
Non-volatile memory is an important component in a wide range of high-performance embedded applications. Especially, many consumer, industrial, and medical applications need increased re-writability ...
The global market for Non-Volatile Memory was valued at USD 70880 Million in the year 2024 and is projected to reach a revised size of USD 104490 Million by 2031, growing at a CAGR of 5.8% during the ...
Researchers scientists have unlocked a new realm of possibilities for non-volatile phase change memory, a type of electronic memory capable of retaining data even without power. Traditionally, ...
Researchers achieved ultrafast, stable switching of ferroaxial states using polarized terahertz light, paving the way for next-gen data storage. (Nanowerk News) Ferroic materials such as ferromagnets ...
A long-running problem in the computer world is that DRAM is the fastest memory available but also volatile, so it can't hold onto its data when power is shut off. This makes it useless for data ...
UD’s Tingyi Gu receives NSF CAREER award to study materials that can create more reliable, less energy-intensive forms of computer memory To develop the types of high-speed, energy-efficient ...
What is PCMO ReRAM? Difference between filamentary and PCMO ReRAM. Why tunable persistence is important. The idea of non-volatile, resistive RAM (ReRAM) has been around for a while. Its aim is to ...
The type of memory a designer selects for an embedded project drives overall system operation and performance, so obviously this is a very important decision. Whether the system runs on batteries or ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. This is the third in a set of four blogs about projections for digital storage and memory for the following year that we have been ...
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