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Micron and Intel Announce 3D NAND Flash Co-Development To Push SSDs Past 10TB

MojoKid writes Both Micron and Intel noted in a release today that traditional planar NAND flash memory is reaching a dead-end, and as such, have been working together on 3D memory technology that could open the floodgates for high densities and faster speeds. Not all 3D memory is alike, however. This joint development effort resulted in a "floating gate cell" being used, something not uncommon for standard flash, but a first for 3D. Ultimately, this 3D NAND is composed of flash cells stacked 32 high, resulting in 256Gb MLC and 384Gb TLC die that fit inside of a standard package. That gives us 48GB per die, and up to 750GB in a single package. Other benefits include faster performance, reduced cost, and technologies that help extend the life of the memory.

3 of 93 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Storage space isn't the problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Simple. Don't use SystemD! Get one of the BSD's.

  2. Re:Headline != Story by edmudama · · Score: 4, Informative

    750GB per package.

    A single SSD may have anywhere from 1 to $alot of packages on the board, hence 10TB SSDs.

    --
    More data, damnit!
  3. Re:Headline != Story by beelsebob · · Score: 3, Informative

    750GB is the amount they can fit one one chip package - i.e. what they could fit on a SD card. A typical gum stick SSD has several of these (usually around 5), hence the 3-4TB per gumstick estimate. A 2.5" drive will typically have more like 12-15 of them, hence the 10TB estimate.