3D Xpoint (pronounced "crosspoint") is designed in a 3D structure, like some of the cutting-edge 3D NAND we've discussed. Unlike NAND, however, 3D Xpoint doesn't use an electrical charge to store data ...
Micron has announced that it will buy Intel's stake in IM Flash Technologies, a joint venture between the two companies that's been responsible for a number of high-profile technologies from both ...
Micron has announced that it will be ceasing development of its 3D XPoint technology, something it had co-developed with CPU giant Intel. The company has announced it will be increasing its investment ...
Computer storage has been stuck in an innovation rut over the last two decades. While consumer drives have improved immensely, the fundamentals they're based on haven't changed. Computers use DRAM for ...
The big picture: Micron Technology is washing its hands of 3D XPoint, the memory technology it announced alongside Intel back in 2015. The company has halted R&D and is putting its fab up for sale.
Intel won’t be the only company gearing up to sell super-fast SSDs based on the new 3D Xpoint storage and memory technology; other storage companies will also offer them with technology provided by ...
Like many system architects the world over, we had high hopes for the 3D XPoint variant of phase change memory (PCM) when it launched with much fanfare back in July 2015 after being developed jointly ...
Intel and Micron ran a joint development and production program for the Phase Change Memory know as 3D XPoint. This semiconductor non-volatile memory product is faster and more durable than NAND flash ...
What just happened? Micron back in March announced it had ceased production of 3D XPoint memory and was putting its Lehi, Utah-based fab up for sale. They've since found a buyer in Texas Instruments.
Texas Instruments has agreed to pay $900 million to buy Micron Technology’s 300-mm semiconductor fab in Lehi, Utah, in a move to increase its production capacity and exert more control over its supply ...
Micron announced that it will increase its investment in memory products that leverage the Compute Express Link (CXL) and that it is ceasing development of its 3D XPoint technology. The company said ...
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