Miscellaneous Reviews
Super-Cooled Quantum Computing Is Coming
It’s very small, very cold and very hard to program; D-Wave says it’s the first working quantum computer and it recognizes images. Read More
Miscellaneous Previous news
- TechEd 2006 Day 1 Slideshow: New features for Office 2007, flash...
- Desktop LCD market moves rapidly towards widescreen displays - reports
- TechEd 2006: Microsoft preps flash-based "performance accelerators"...
- TechEd 2006: Hybrid hard drives to become Vista Premium requirement
- Intel accelerates shipment date of its Opteron beater "Tulsa"
- TechEd 2006: Microsoft's high-end Office 2007 gets customization tools
- PQI to roll out 512 MB microSD card in July
- Epson develops A6-size e-paper
- LG.Philips LCD lowers shipment forecast, predicts sharper price...
- Computex attracts more buyers from emerging markets
A-Data: DRAM outlook healthy on NAND flash capacity adjustment
10:42 AM - June 13, 2006 by
From the Web
Source: Tom's Hardware US – Category : Miscellaneous 0 comment
Source: Tom's Hardware US – Category : Miscellaneous 0 comment
DRAM module maker A-Data Technology again posted a bullish outlook for the DRAM industry and the company anticipates that pricing in the DDR2 segment will regain growth momentum from August on a capacity squeeze coming from the transition to NAND flash production, according to company chairman Simon Chen.Chen explained that leading chipmakers including Hynix Semiconductor and Samsung Electronics are still placing production priority with NAND flash rather than DRAM.
More here at DigiTimes.
-
Previous News Article
SiS to begin producing DDR3 chipsets... -
Next News Article
Texas Instruments: 45-nm chip making...
React! Return to news index
Latest News:
- TechEd 2006: Windows Live team unveils new SDK, demos 'mashups'
- Texas Instruments: 45-nm chip making process doubles output per wafer
- A-Data: DRAM outlook healthy on NAND flash capacity adjustment
- SiS to begin producing DDR3 chipsets in late 2007
- TechEd 2006 Day 1 Slideshow: New features for Office 2007, flash acceleration for Vista
- Desktop LCD market moves rapidly towards widescreen displays - reports