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greenpattern
Not strange no PCM phones yet. Consuming more energy in shorter time means ...
resistion
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Micron ships phase-change memory
Peter Clarke
12/12/2012 6:09 AM EST
LONDON – Memory chip vendor Micron Technology Inc. has backfilled its range of 45-nm phase-change memory (PCM), which it says is shipping in "high volume" to Nokia, as reported by EE Times in November.
Micron (Boise, Idaho) has announced it has been shipping 45-nm 1-Gbit PCM multchip package to Nokia for use in the their phones for some time and is now sampling a 512-Mbit PCM plus 512-Mbit LPDDR2 MCP. Nokia is using Micron's PCM solution to enrich the functionality of "select devices" in its portfolio, Micron said.
At the time of the Electronica exhibition EE Times referenced a Micron executive saying that Micron will ship tens of millions of units of 1-Gbit PCM in 2012. Micron's volume comes from a couple of cell phone design wins (see Micron phase-change memory to skip a node). One is the Nokia Asha phone (see www.nokia.com/global/products/asha).
"Nokia has always found ways to provide innovative mobile devices for its customers across the globe, and Micron's PCM for mobile enables us to enhance the performance of Asha smartphones," said Dirk Didascalou, senior vice president for mobile phones at Nokia, in a statement issued by Micron. "Micron is a trusted supplier, and their new technology helps create a strong user experience with a number of feature and performance enhancements."
Micron said its PCM can speed up boot time for mobile phones at switch-on, simplify software development and boost performance with its overwrite capability. Micron's 45-nm PCM components are being targeted at mobile phones with a future devices aimed at smartphones and tablet computers, the company said.
Micron's 45nm PCM solution is currently targeted for utilization in mobile phones bringing enhanced capabilities, with a future roadmap aimed at addressing smartphones and media tablets.
Related links and articles:
Micron reportedly preps Israel job cuts
Micron phase-change memory to skip a node
Micron claims first high-volume production of 45-nm PCM
Electronica: Micron memory to skip a node
Micron (Boise, Idaho) has announced it has been shipping 45-nm 1-Gbit PCM multchip package to Nokia for use in the their phones for some time and is now sampling a 512-Mbit PCM plus 512-Mbit LPDDR2 MCP. Nokia is using Micron's PCM solution to enrich the functionality of "select devices" in its portfolio, Micron said.
At the time of the Electronica exhibition EE Times referenced a Micron executive saying that Micron will ship tens of millions of units of 1-Gbit PCM in 2012. Micron's volume comes from a couple of cell phone design wins (see Micron phase-change memory to skip a node). One is the Nokia Asha phone (see www.nokia.com/global/products/asha).
"Nokia has always found ways to provide innovative mobile devices for its customers across the globe, and Micron's PCM for mobile enables us to enhance the performance of Asha smartphones," said Dirk Didascalou, senior vice president for mobile phones at Nokia, in a statement issued by Micron. "Micron is a trusted supplier, and their new technology helps create a strong user experience with a number of feature and performance enhancements."
Micron said its PCM can speed up boot time for mobile phones at switch-on, simplify software development and boost performance with its overwrite capability. Micron's 45-nm PCM components are being targeted at mobile phones with a future devices aimed at smartphones and tablet computers, the company said.
Micron's 45nm PCM solution is currently targeted for utilization in mobile phones bringing enhanced capabilities, with a future roadmap aimed at addressing smartphones and media tablets.
Related links and articles:
Micron reportedly preps Israel job cuts
Micron phase-change memory to skip a node
Micron claims first high-volume production of 45-nm PCM
Electronica: Micron memory to skip a node
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resistion
12/12/2012 9:29 AM EST
RESET current around 150 uA, even at 22 nm will be stuck around 100 uA.
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iniewski
12/12/2012 10:53 AM EST
Very impressive achievement for Micron...I remember heated discussions just few years ago whether phase change memory will ever make it...I guess it did!
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rbtbob
12/12/2012 11:19 AM EST
Stan Ovshinsky died on October 17th 2012. Energy Conversion Devices is at the tail-end of bankruptcy liquidation. Micron is buying the 1/3 of Ovonyx that ECD owned for 12 million. NOW Micron is producing PCM at a good pace. Dag-nabbit!
I had missed Ron NEale's two articles on crystal electrodes that are linked in the "related information" box. (top-right) He seems to be learning more about the peculiar mechanisms in play.
Micron's recent patents indicate that they are now a powerhouse in R&D. The world will benefit greatly from the fruits of their research. I do not expect Intel to let Micron run loose for much longer. Time will tell eh?
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resistion
12/12/2012 11:59 AM EST
The so-called PCM is not in their spec.
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resistion
12/12/2012 8:06 PM EST
Nokia Asha has more ROM than RAM, strange way to use PCM (not even mentioned still).
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greenpattern
2/7/2013 3:11 AM EST
Not strange no PCM phones yet. Consuming more energy in shorter time means higher power consumption.
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Solster
12/13/2012 11:26 AM EST
Hmm, Nokia must be out of their mind - paying their hard earned (and shall we say - scarce) cash for a technology that according to many forum-posters' (no less important and knowledeable people than that!) perceptions of strangeness :)
/end sarcasm
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resistion
12/13/2012 5:57 PM EST
If it is used merely as bootup ROM, worth a laugh.
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iniewski
12/13/2012 11:37 AM EST
here is the link to Micron's web site describing PCM
http://www.micron.com/products/phase-change-memory
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resistion
12/14/2012 1:08 AM EST
Thanks for the link. Only 90 nm 128 Mb available. Any 45 nm Gb must be sampling.
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rbtbob
12/16/2012 12:05 PM EST
The description of what Nokia is getting from Micron is linked on the top-right of the page that inlewski provided:
http://www.micron.com/products/multichip-packages/pcm-based-mcp
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resistion
2/5/2013 10:34 AM EST
DRAM backup? Necessary? Why not direct access?
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greenpattern
2/6/2013 11:54 AM EST
Going from 90 nm to 45 nm endurance went from 1 million cycles to 100 K cycles. Not good.
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resistion
2/7/2013 1:27 AM EST
Mid-Nov 2012, no PCM shipped to Nokia, but Asha 311 released already Aug 2012?
From 11-15-2012:
"Bader said that Micron will ship tens of millions of units of 1-Gbit PCM in 2012 in 45-nm process in its leading-edge component, which combines a 1-Gbit PCM die with a 512-Mbit SDRAM and provides a LPDDR2 interface."
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resistion
2/7/2013 2:02 AM EST
Original source: http://www.eetimes.com/electronics-news/4401477/Electronica--Micron-memory-to-skip-a-node
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