Toshiba Boosts Flash Memory Speed
NAND flash memory could support 12MB-per-second transactions next year.
Martyn Williams, IDG News Service
Toshiba is planning to double the read/write speed of its NAND flash memory chips in the next year.
NAND flash memory is used as the basic storage in devices such as digital cameras, music players and memory cards and faster chips could mean faster data transfers between computers and the devices.
At present, Toshiba's flash chips can read and write data at 6MB per second but this will be doubled to 12MB per second sometime next year when the company begins producing chips on a new manufacturing line, said Hiroko Mochida, a Toshiba spokesperson.
The company currently makes most of its NAND flash chips on a 90-nanometer production line but plans to start up a state-of-the-art 52-nanometer line in 2006 on which the chips will be made.
The nanometer measurement refers to the size of the smallest feature on the chip and is a standard gauge of the manufacturing line. Smaller numbers mean a more advanced line and these are typically capable of producing physically smaller chips that are both cheaper and use less energy.
Initial chips will have a capacity of 2GB, Mochida said.
Rivalry Accelerates
Toshiba's new chips are coming as competition in the flash memory chip market is increasing. Apple's launch of the iPod nano, which uses NAND flash memory, has increased demand for the chips and also expanded the potential market size so chip makers are battling each other to increase their sales.
"Hynix [Semiconductor] increased capacity from the second quarter of this year," said Hiroyuki Shimizu, an analyst at Gartner in Tokyo. "Their production went up sharply to close to Toshiba's so Toshiba had to increase their production [to maintain market share]. Maybe at the end of this year Hynix will be the number three in the market."
Toshiba was the second ranked company in the flash memory by revenue last year, according to Gartner estimates. Samsung Electronics led the market and Toshiba was followed by SanDisk, Renesas Technology, and then Hynix.
The competition is good news for consumers as prices are falling, said Shimizu. But some worry that demand will outstrip supply leading to a shortage.
"At this moment NAND flash [price] is still going down but if there is a shortage of NAND flash memory [the manufacturers] will be trying to raise prices. Now they are trying to get [a larger] market share so they still have to reduce prices."
With HP wireless printers, you could have printed this from any room in the house. Live wirelessly. Print wirelessly.
Laptop Showcase
Webcast: Going Green
Related Components Articles
- Quadruple Your Fun (and Productivity) With a Four-Monitor System Think dual-display systems are the bee's knees? This quad-head setup will blow your mind.
- After the Core 2 Duo, What's Next for Apple Laptops? Hitting the sweet spot between 'too slow' and 'fast enough' is critical.
- Gartner Sees Chip Industry Slowing Gartner sees the chip market slowing but plans to leave its 2008 revenue growth forecast unchanged.
- Time Working Against AMD's Asset-light Plans AMD wants to sell of its chip plants, but its financial problems will make that difficult, an analyst warned.
- Intel's Future: Real Transformers and Power by Wi-Fi Shape-shifting robots that become whatever machine is needed are already in the works in Intel's labs.
Best Prices on Graphics Cards
Radeon HD 4870 Video CardPrice: $260.00
Verto GeForce 9600 GT Video CardPrice: $110.99
GeForce GTX 260 Video CardPrice: $279.99
GeForce 8800 GTS Video CardPrice: $205.99
GeForce 9800 GX2 Video CardPrice: $399.99
GeForce 9800 GX2 Video CardPrice: $321.30
- CDW Virtualization Center What is Virtualization and how can it help you save money? Click here to find out.
- Asus Laptop Showcase Ultra-fashionable thin and light notebooks with SmartLogon Face Recognition. Find out more...
- HP Ink Center Bring improved color and brilliance to your printed material. Visit the Resource Center for more info...








"Toshiba Boosts Flash Memory Speed" Comments