Flash Memory Stocks List

Flash Memory Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Jun 14 SIMO Silicon Motion (SIMO) Ascends While Market Falls: Some Facts to Note
Jun 14 MU Is Micron Technology, Inc. (NASDAQ:MU) The Best AI Semiconductor Stock to Buy Now?
Jun 14 INTC Tech Innovation To Solve EV Challenges
Jun 14 MU Nvidia Is 2024’s Best-Performing Chip Stock. These 4 Are Next.
Jun 14 INTC Intel: Turnaround Is Working, I'm Bullish
Jun 14 INTC Intel Corporation (INTC) Fell Due to Disappointing Near-Term Outlook
Jun 14 SIMO Best Growth Stocks to Buy for June 14th
Jun 14 TER Analysts Say You're Crazy If You Still Own These 12 Stocks
Jun 14 MU The Zacks Analyst Blog Highlights Stocks recently featured in the blog include: NVIDIA, Alphabet, Netflix, Coinbase and Micron Technology
Jun 14 MU The Zacks Analyst Blog Highlights Stocks recently featured in the blog include: SAP SE,Applied Materials, Micron Technology, Canterbury Park and Village Super Market
Jun 14 MU Tech war: China's top memory chip maker YMTC sees rising domestic demand, defying US curbs
Jun 14 MU Will Micron Technology's Magnificent Stock Market Rally Continue After June 26?
Jun 14 MU Spotting Winners: Seagate Technology (NASDAQ:STX) And Semiconductors Stocks In Q1
Jun 14 INTC Q1 Earnings Outperformers: AMD (NASDAQ:AMD) And The Rest Of The Processors and Graphics Chips Stocks
Jun 13 TER Teradyne (TER) Stock Declines While Market Improves: Some Information for Investors
Jun 13 SIMO Silicon Motion (SIMO) Stock Dips While Market Gains: Key Facts
Jun 13 MU Is Micron Technology, Inc. (NASDAQ:MU) The Best Hardware Stock To Buy According To Goldman Sachs?
Jun 13 INTC Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC) vs. Other Hardware Stock According To Goldman Sachs
Jun 13 INTC Transport of ‘super loads’ across Ohio prompts congestion warning
Jun 13 MU Top Research Reports for SAP, Applied Materials & Micron Technology
Flash Memory

Flash memory is an electronic (solid-state) non-volatile computer storage medium that can be electrically erased and reprogrammed.
Toshiba developed flash memory from EEPROM (electrically erasable programmable read-only memory) in the early 1980s and introduced it to the market in 1984. The two main types of flash memory are named after the NAND and NOR logic gates. The individual flash memory cells exhibit internal characteristics similar to those of the corresponding gates.
While EPROMs had to be completely erased before being rewritten, NAND-type flash memory may be written and read in blocks (or pages) which are generally much smaller than the entire device. NOR-type flash allows a single machine word (byte) to be written – to an erased location – or read independently.
The NAND type is found primarily in memory cards, USB flash drives, solid-state drives (those produced in 2009 or later), and similar products, for general storage and transfer of data. NAND or NOR flash memory is also often used to store configuration data in numerous digital products, a task previously made possible by EEPROM or battery-powered static RAM. One key disadvantage of flash memory is that it can only endure a relatively small number of write cycles in a specific block.Example applications of both types of flash memory include personal computers, PDAs, digital audio players, digital cameras, mobile phones, synthesizers, video games, scientific instrumentation, industrial robotics, and medical electronics. In addition to being non-volatile, flash memory offers fast read access times, although not as fast as static RAM or ROM. Its mechanical shock resistance helps explain its popularity over hard disks in portable devices, as does its high durability, ability to withstand high pressure, temperature and immersion in water, etc.Although flash memory is technically a type of EEPROM, the term "EEPROM" is generally used to refer specifically to non-flash EEPROM which is erasable in small blocks, typically bytes. Because erase cycles are slow, the large block sizes used in flash memory erasing give it a significant speed advantage over non-flash EEPROM when writing large amounts of data. As of 2013, flash memory costs much less than byte-programmable EEPROM and had become the dominant memory type wherever a system required a significant amount of non-volatile solid-state storage.

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