Intel & Micron Show 34-nm, 32-Gbit Flash Memory Chip 76
Lucas123 writes "IM Flash Technologies, a joint venture between Intel and Micron, announced it has developed a 32-gigabit NAND flash memory chip that is expected to enable the production of cheaper solid-state drives with twice the storage capacity of today's products. The 34-nanometer, multi-level chip is smaller than Intel's latest CPUs. Samples will be available in June with production by the end of the year."
Smaller is bigger (Score:2)
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Re:Phirst Spot (Score:5, Informative)
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There are two methods that I've seen:
The key is determining how much to add. Having too few won't allow you to hit your yield targets, and adding too many is a
Re:Phirst Spot (Score:4, Insightful)
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At the 65nm node and below, gate leakage is a big concern, and it can increase power consumption beyond the savings gained from reducing the operating voltage.
The Price of Flash (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The Price of Flash (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The Price of Flash (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:The Price of Flash (Score:4, Informative)
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So your issue is... what?
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Sad and angry because my recently dis titled girlfriend is a lying cheating whore (but still incredible in bed) and genuinely confused as to how you came to the conclusion that cited current manufacturing cost is more than twice actual retail. While I remain completely and entirely baffled by this conclusion I do wish to apologize for unjustly insulting you without provocation.
P.S.
<pointless_ranting>
The reasoning behind my seemingly incoherent
message was
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(Slashdot really needs an "Edit Post" button)
Current NAND manufacturing cost = a bit WAY less than 0.001 USD per Mbit. (~$0.0003/Mb,$0.0024/MB,$2.50/GB)
34-nm NAND manufacturing cost = ~$0.0001/Mb,$0.001/MB,$0.99/GB
$100 8GB CF = $12.50/GB. Factoring in controller and assembly that's about 60% profit.(Yes I did research assembly costs)
$900 64GB SSD = $14.06/GB. Again about 60% Profit (Controller and assembly for an SSD is much higher due to low demand)
So a 64GB SSD based on the 34-nm process would cost about $420, dropping our cost to $6.56/GB.
Sorry to burst your bubble but the only thing out there that has a manufacturing cost that is double it's retail price is the PS3.
Re:The Price of Flash (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.dramexchange.com/ [dramexchange.com]
Scroll down to the flash section.
SLC is the good stuff used in the big fast SSD's you get from people like Apple.
MLC is the slower, less long lasting, stuff commonly used in thumb drives.
$2.08 for a Gigabyte in MLC
$6.70 for a Gigabyte of SLC
If you want to know the long term price improvement rate for flash, you can join that site for $1000 a year or if you want the cheap version, I've been tracking retail flash (MLC) prices for 9 years at my site here:
http://www.mattscomputertrends.com/flashmemory.html [mattscomputertrends.com]
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If so how much? Potential speed increase over magnetic disk could accelerate the payback for IO bound database applications.
Currently magnetic disks have such effective caches that they are able to nullify a lot of the speed advantages of SSD. In fact some benchmarks I've read still show magnetic disks leading speedwise in realistic application benchmarks.
But this could also be partially due to new unoptimized drivers for such devices.
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All the 'latest' SSD's are dominating the hard drive now. FusionIO's special case, utterly devestates the hard drive.
C//
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Anyway, no, they're not a replacement for a SAN. That's just marketing hyperbole.
You'll find them in your SAN soon enough, though. Their real target market is things like embedded devices inside SAN/NAS controllers. Think "journal device" or MRU unit for SAN blocks.
They would also make for a great swap file device.
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C//
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If so how much? Potential speed increase over magnetic disk could accelerate the payback for IO bound database applications.
Sure they do. The performance of flash is constricted by how long it takes to charge the cell.
Q=CV => Charge = Capacitance * Voltage
Translation: a higher voltage charges a given capacitance more quickly. A lower capacitance means you reduce the overall charge needed to get the cell into the "written" state you want. Thu
Size matters (Score:1)
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Costs (Score:4, Funny)
The total cost to develop a chip product -- including all EDA functions as well as maskmaking -- has been nearly doubling each node from 90nm to 65nm to 45nm. Moving on to 32nm is projected to raise costs only ~50% over 45nm, but the absolute numbers are now making design-teams pause to consider their choice of manufacturing node. Kinugawa predicted that neither Japanese fabless nor customers nor IDM-internal designers are prepared to jump to the next node -- such that a "several year gap" will appear between the availability of 32nm node fab capacity and substantial demand!
New tech is expected every 2-3 years.
32nm was expected for 2009-2010 and 22nm is expected in 2011-2012
Memory is almost always ahead. (Score:4, Interesting)
All kinds of memory can use smaller processes because the logic is much simpler; you're basically laying the same thing out over and over and over again on a die. For the same exact reason, most companies use SRAMs to test their processes before moving up to higher level logic like processors.
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Secondly, the technology is considerably different. Because RAM is so simple to build, there are a lot more corners you are able to cut. With some RAMs you can even get away with selling non-
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Re:Costs (Score:4, Interesting)
Celebration! 2008 marks the 25th anniversary of this claim being made at a die-shrink -- or at least 1983 is the first time I heard it. People were talking about the 1u (1000nm) "holy grail" and how it would likely never happen because it wouldn't be worth the cost...
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that is a small chip (Score:2)
Reliability (Score:1, Interesting)
What about the reliability? It's great that they can manufacture on a 32nm line, but given that this is a new process, what reliability testing has it undergone?
I'll go with the proven technology, thank you very much, especially for something where the 'smaller is not necessarilly better' physics side of things kick in.
Re:Reliability (Score:4, Interesting)
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Flash obviously has better seek of course.
Oh and as a guy with a 4 drive RAID 5 array which can hit 200mb/s, hard drive speeds are not a big bottleneck.
And hard drives will always beat flash when it comes to raw data storage.
My raid array gives me a terrabyte of usable space with redundancy for a few hundred bucks (back 2 years).
Flash today would cost thousands for the same amount of storage.
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Re:Reliability (Score:4, Insightful)
Sure, you're getting 200Mb/s, but you need four drives to do it. A SSD can give you the same performance and reliability as a RAID array in a single drive. Sure, right now, that single drive will cost as much as your entire array, but that situation will improve as manufacturing volumes increase and prices come down.
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Details here [ocforums.com]
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Idea (Score:1, Funny)
When speaking with most non-tech people I know their eyes glaze over whenver I mention megabytes, gigabytes etc.
But now I think this can be solved with MP3, Kilo-MP3, Giga-MP3 etc metrics.
This:
me: "I have 64GB of RAM in my PC"
listener :
Becomes this:
me: "I have 2K-MP3 of RAM in my PC"
listener : wow!
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Typo ? (Score:2, Funny)
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What you're missing is that this is a single chip. One chip with 32gbit is a 4gbyte single chip. Couple 4 of these on a single thumb drive (and they're small enough to do it), and you've got a 16gbyte USB thumb drive. And it only cost them $16 to build. Well... $20, considering packaging and control chips etc.
Now contrast that against the current cost of a 16GB flash drive. 16GB thumb drive
Re:Typo ? (Score:4, Informative)
You can also get 32 GB ones [newegg.com].
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16GB thumb drives don't exist... the biggest I've seen is 4GB...
Where you live, middle of Amazon rainforest? 16GB thumbdrives been round pretty long time. 32GB is the largest that is currently available in the retail channel. Even eensy teensy size of your fingernail microSDHC cards reached 8GB a while ago.
As for SSD having higher cost; more complicated interface logic (pci, sata/pata, etc), they tend to use SLC instead of MLC flash, they tend to be in a parallel or interleaved organization, some have proper on-board logic for wear leveling (compared to the "smartmedia
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Actually ADATA sells the MyFlash 16 [amazon.com]. It's a "double long" flash drive compared to most, and quality is very poor. (I've owned two, one was defective, and the other was unreliable, but WAS 16gb)
My current drive is a SanDisk FireFly 8 [shopbot.com.au], for it's small size (sub-single length) and reliable operation. I would LOVE to replace it with a 16, and I've been waiting what I consider a very long time for this jump to occur. Here's hoping by christmas I can have a FireFly 16. It's my serv
A Bit Of Confusion With Flash Sizes (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:A Bit Of Confusion With Flash Sizes (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:A Bit Of Confusion With Flash Sizes (Score:5, Informative)
Looks like Intel is has big SSD plans (Score:3, Informative)
vintage flash memory. (Score:1)
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always just over the next hill (Score:2, Interesting)
Good news for portable operating environments (Score:2)
I've been booting from USB for the better part of a year now. (I'm on such a system as I type this.) It's a lot easier to manage an operating environment on a USB than one on an internal HD. Especially, if you're in the habit of switching machines frequently. The OS I use is FaunOS [faunos.com]. As the price of this kind of hardware drops, it's easier to buy into the vision of portable environments [faunos.com].
Portable environments have to be "live" systems. They present interesting, unique challenges, but as FaunOS and a