Future Computer Memory
April 24th, 2010 | by computermemory |StanfordUniversity asked:
Al Fazio, an Intel Fellow and Director of Memory Technology Development in the Technology Manufacturing Group. talks about non-volatile memories in the form of NAND memory, from basic operation and reliability physics; system implementation of NAND into solid state disks and caches and their impact upon computing. He also discusses future memory devices and architectures. Stanford University: www.stanford.edu Stanford Center for Professional Development: scpd.stanford.edu Stanford University …
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9 Responses to “Future Computer Memory”
By Kaish3k on Apr 27, 2010 | Reply
OS depend on writing files constantly to determine the outcome of events.. No getting around it, and those editable regions allow the OS to operate. Unless the OS could only write to itself with certified pre-requested functions. You see the delema?
By guest2424 on Apr 28, 2010 | Reply
I think using a Flash Drive as the core of the Operating System (such as Windows), but save all your files to a different drive, would be nice. It would minimize the writes because all the writes could be on a linked folder on a hard drive, which could make it so your OS could stay virus free and intact by locking the write function to the drive when not changing OS or OS files directly such as updates.
By guest2424 on Apr 29, 2010 | Reply
Skip to 5:30
Because its just 1 screen with no audio until then.
Thank you, you saved me time of sitting at that same screen.
By gregg4 on May 1, 2010 | Reply
that’s how they make long videos! lol
By Ishidasouken on May 6, 2010 | Reply
well “the wrong man in the right place can make all the differences”
By NiGhtMarEs0nWax on May 8, 2010 | Reply
hey i didnt know gordon was at stanford.
By fortissimoX on May 9, 2010 | Reply
Why is there a pause until 5:30?
By atlaschooty on May 12, 2010 | Reply
awesome university..
By QuanSai on May 13, 2010 | Reply
I’m applying to this university. Get ready for me!