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Fast-Switching Micromagnets

apirkle writes "Why can't we use magnetic media as RAM? Flipping the north and south poles of the tiny magnets we call bits simply takes too long. A collaboration of researchers has recently demonstrated a much faster method for reversing magnetization, described in Physical Review Focus."

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  1. Re:Dumping core... by Koos+Baster · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Yep, they did in the 50s, 60s and early seventies. I got one of these antique core memory modules at home. It features 2000 tiny magnetic cores (2-3mm), connected by a grid of copper wires, to provide a massive 400 words (4 bits + parity). It's definitely hand-crafted, probably by some poor kid in an Asian sweat shop.

    The module is 20 x 30 cm, weighs a lot and produces a lot of heat, and apparently is very slow. Not exactly what you would consider the future of fast memories. But I wonder what contemporary production techniques and future nanotech (and probably an expired patent) can do to revive this technology. I'm sure that as with any "novel" memory technique it will take a few decades before it will pay off, else why would we still use magnetic hard disks for fast mass storage and not optical (or opto-magnetic) stuff?

    --
    The human brain is a wonderful thing: It starts working the moment you are born, and never stops until you stand up to speak in public -- Sir George Jessel