Is the chip boom coming to an end?
After a blistering year-and-a-half long surge, a sudden drop in some memory chip prices is causing jitters among investors.
After a blistering year-and-a-half long surge, a sudden drop in some memory chip prices is causing jitters among investors.
While worldwide semiconductor sales in January were up just slightly from December, they wildly outpaced numbers from the same time a year ago.
A company owned jointly by Intel and memory maker Micron Technology started mass producing NAND flash memory chips using tiny 34-nanometer technology, the companies said Monday.
In April Toshiba will begin selling NAND flash memory chips capable of holding up to 2GB of data, the company announced on Wednesday.