MRAM Inches Towards Prime Time
levin writes "According to an article over at EETimes, magnetoresistive RAM chips are getting a little more practical. Infineon Technologies released info on a new 16M MRAM component on Tuesday and the read and write cycle times of this chip make it 'competitive with established DRAM.' How long before nonvolatile memory becomes the solution to crash-prone software rather than better programming?"
If you want "better programming", send your programming jobs to new zealand and not india
Webmaster of Infoweb
Hello. What do you think -hard disks- are?
A lot slower than MRAM and not truly practical as primary memory.
Non-volatile memory has nothing to do with 'protecting from bad programming'
It shouldn't, but that doesn't mean people won't use it to write one good recovery tool and then sloppy code from there on out. This was the original point of my asinine question.
`which fortune`