Samsung Begins Mass Production of Industry's First 3D NAND Flash 56
Lucas123 writes "Samsung has announced it is mass producing the industry's first three-dimensional (3D) Vertical NAND (V-NAND) flash memory that breaks through current planar NAND scaling limits, offering gains in both density and non-volatile memory performance. The first iteration of the V-NAND is a 24-layer, 128Gbit chip that will eventually be used in embedded flash and solid-state drive applications, Samsung said. It provides 2 to 10 times higher reliability and twice the write performance of conventional 10nm-class floating gate NAND flash memory. Initial device capacities will range from 128GB to 1TB, 'depending on customer demand.' 'In the future, they could go considerably higher than that,' said Steve Weinger, director of NAND Marketing for Samsung Semiconductor. Samsung's process uses cell structure based on 3D Charge Trap Flash (CTF) technology and vertical interconnect process technology to link the 3D cell array. By applying the latter technologies, Samsung's 3D V-NAND can provide over twice the scaling of current 20nm-class planar NAND flash."
You'd think ComputerWorld would know better... (Score:1, Insightful)
"128 gigabit (Gb) density in a single chip..." - Samsung press release [samsung.com]
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128 gigabits per Chip and 128 gigabytes per device.
You'd think smart asses on slashdot would know... (Score:2, Insightful)
If you lack the reading comprension skills and computer knowledge to correct someone, it makes you look twice as dumb as you think you are making the object of your correction look. Virtually no device is deployed with only one of these chips. Many are deployed in arrays of 8-32 or more. So if you have 8 bits, you have 1 byte. Consquently, if you have 8 chips of 128,000,000,000 bits you have 128,000,000,000 bytes. (Don't get into the pedantic Gibi versus Giga)
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> (Don't get into the pedantic Gibi versus Giga)
That's being pernickety, not being pedantic.
So am I.
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I think, but do not know for sure, that 'persnickety' is more common the the United States of America, whereas 'pernickety' is what is spoken in British English. I certainly never heard 'persnickety' until I moved to the United States.
I could check, but I won't, because I cannot be arsed.
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chip size is different from device capacities(multiple chips, in device sizes from x to xx), one is talking about the other.
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You'd think ComputerWorld would know better...
It's not 128 GB (gigabytes), it's 128 Gb (gigabits) of capacity.
"128 gigabit (Gb) density in a single chip..." - Samsung press release [samsung.com]
No no no. Please read carefully. The ComputerWorld article says that the final device ("once used to create embedded memory and solid-state drives") can have from 128GB to 1TB of storage. However the article states erroneously "Samsung's new V-NAND offers a 128 bit density in a single chip".
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still don't get why I'm supposed to be excited (Score:2)
Slashdot seems very excited about Samsung NAND lately [slashdot.org] but I don't really get it. Is this really anything but an expected incremental improvement? Is there something I'm missing that makes this super-futuristic NAND OF THE FUTURE live up to the hype?
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It exists? It means that NAND can live another generation or two longer as a viable technology before the competitors (e.g., RRAM) are ready to step in.
Re:still don't get why I'm supposed to be excited (Score:5, Funny)
US President Barrack Obama has been quoted saying "since this NAND type RAM is such basic knowledge and essential for producing smartphones, Samsung should provide it for free to US companies, starting with Apple since they are already violating their precious design IP."
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Oh come on, Apple started this war. Probably not a good idea to go after the company providing so many of your components, but whatever.
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Smartphone Wars [wikipedia.org] - Apple is not the first company to sue nor are they always the first aggressor.
This whole thing is just like an old-west bar-fight... if you don't punch someone in the face they're eventually going to break a chair over your back.
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Considering that all Samsung's other competitors have had to pay to use their patent, and Samsung has had to pay to use all the other RAND patents, yes, it's more than a little annoying to see Apple get a free pass for ignoring its licensing requirements all these years, just because it's the president's little love muffin.
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Well then, I would say that smartphones have become such a fundamental human right that US companies like Apple should give away iPhones for free since Apple has violated so many human rights overseas.
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I'd say this is up there with perpendicular recording, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perpendicular_recording for hard disks
As the summary suggests it enables higher densities and improved transfer rates as we bump up against space and power limits based on physical limitations of process engineering. The fact is that 10nm is bumping head long into some fundamental laws of physics and the ability to scale storage to the point where it reaches the densities of spinning platters is still a factor or two away i
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From what I can tell from users outside the slashdot crowd the cheaper SSDs are already in the size range that works well for the mainstream usage. The problem is that the cheaper SSDs aren't cheap enough.
they're cheap enough, not big enough. you can't use them for archiving photos etc.. so if you go with a cheap small one(comparable to cheapest new hd pricing) you're going to have to go with a 1tb usb drive or something else to have the space to install games, store music etc..
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Unless you're crazy with the photos or are a professional 'most' SSDs will be plenty large enough. It's Video (and games) that exceed most HD's.
You're still going to see HD's in most things until Flash is cheaper for what the 'average' user needs/wants. One thing to remember is that at this point that there's a price floor for HD's. Such low end devices are more expensive per GB than the larger HDs because the mechanicals impose a certain minimum cost.
We're getting closer, but for power users on a budget
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10D (Score:1)
Why haven't we developed bits with ten or more states instead of two? This is something I've always wondered. Wouldn't that increase memory density and reduce the complexities involved with conversions from decimal to binary and back?
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From the link you provided, I believe I'm thinking more of a multi-level cell with ten states instead of four.
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Re:10D (Score:5, Informative)
We have, they're called multi-level cells [wikipedia.org]. They improve memory density but at a cost of increased complexity, lower speed, higher susceptibility to noise, higher power consumption, and decreased lifetime. Decimal arithmetic was used on at least one early computer (ENIAC [wikipedia.org]) but binary circuits were found to be much simpler to design and implement. The only modern non-binary digital computer that I'm aware of is the Soviet Setun [wikipedia.org] that used ternary (tri-state) logic.
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Because it's stupid.
orly? (Score:3)
I demand that they stop price fixing SSDs and RAM just because Windows 8 is selling like crap. Once a 500GB SSD is a reasonable price, I'll pick one up and they'll put Seagate and WD out of business completely. What the hell are they waiting for, sitting back and making ridiculous profits in the short term instead?
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Yeah, because DRAM producers like Samsung have never been convicted of price fixing before. Oh wait, they have. Multiple times.
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One of the few times I agreed with price fixing. Damn those prices were soooo cheap at the time.
Still good but. (Score:2)
This will be a great breakthrough and with 24 times the density / sq. mm. maybe the 1gb/$1 SSD pricing wall will finally fall to around hard drives at around 22gb/$1 but I'm not throwing my hard drives away yet. One thing the article doesn't mention is cost, or anticipated quantity cost and if Samsung be license friendly, i.e., let another FAB produce the chips or will it be Samsung only territory for awhile?
I wonder if they'll let Apple buy the chips too?
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Bad News for Desktop (Score:1)