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Samsung Demos Future Memory Chips

Fletcher points to this story in CNET Asia, excerpting "The Korean electronics giant unveiled an 8-gigabit flash memory chip Monday based on the 60-nanometer process, as well as a 2-gigabit DDR DRAM chip based on the 80-nanometer process. Flash chips, which retain data after a host computer is turned off, are used in flash cards and cell phones, while DDR DRAM is used inside PCs."

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  1. Good stuff, but currently they are prototypes by sczimme · · Score: 5, Insightful


    People tend to get excited about new products like these; in a separate but equally relevant phenomenon, they tend not to RTFA.

    From the article:

    Both chips, however, are prototypes. Companies just began this year to make chips on the 90-nanometer process. (The nanometer measurement refers to average feature sizes on the chips). Eighty-nanometer chips may not come for at least another year, and 65-nanometer chips won't debut until at least the end of 2005.

    In other words, 16GB flash MP3 players will not be available in time for Xmas.

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    I want to drag this out as long as possible. Bring me my protractor.