Melting Memory Chips In Mass Production
chill writes "Nature is reporting that 'South Korean manufacturer Samsung Electronics announced this week that it has begun mass production of a new kind of memory chip that stores information by melting and freezing tiny crystals. Known as phase-change memory (PCM), the idea was first proposed by physicists in the 1960s.' With transistor-equivalent cells only 20 nm wide, switching time is around 16 ns. The first target market is cell phones, but the companies behind the technology see applications in PCs, servers, and other devices as well."
i've been waiting for pcram to show it's head in consumer electronics for a while now. it has the advantages of being hundreds of times faster than flash along with having at least ten times the write-cycle life. it could turn out to be the OLED to DRAM's LCD.
the main disadvantage is that it's rather heat-sensitive, since writing is accomplished by melting crystals with a low melting temperature.
help, my computer's frozen! nothings responding!
did you try reseting your memory?
how do I do that?
a few minutes with a hair dryer should do the trick.
PCM is interesting stuff. Here's some info:
If these things run too hot, you'll literally have vaporware.