http://www.hexus.net/content/item.php?item=6143Random Access Memory has increased in speed significantly over many years, but despite its ability to transfer data at rates orders of magnitude above hard drives, it still has one annoying drawback.
http://www.hexus.net/content/item.php?item=6143Random Access Memory has increased in speed significantly over many years, but despite its ability to transfer data at rates orders of magnitude above hard drives, it still has one annoying drawback.
hmm sounds interesting...
Good timing, I'm just putting together the design for an data logging device and would gladly take 2GB of the stuf now.
This sounds like a very useful technology.
Maybe we'll even change the way our systems work as a result of it - the boundaries between hard drives and system memory were begining to get a little vague with flash, and this takes it a step futher - I can imagine a situation where we have decent solid state storage and only use high speed standard ram as a buffer/cache - possibly localised to each device.
Check out this for MRAM resources, news and forums:
http://www.MRAM-Info.com
This is very exciting indeed, the less moving parts the better.
Sorry,Originally Posted by Steve
I thought my site provides good info about MRAM, and is a valuable resource. I didn't try to hide the fact that it was mine or something.
Ron.
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