Intel has
shipped the first 65nm NOR Flash memory chip with a 1Gb capacity.
The chips are designed for mobile phones with multimedia capabilities such as
photos, video and high-speed data connections. According to Intel, the 1Gb chips
could enable 4-megapixel camera-phones.
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"NOR Flash is really a code execution engine in the handset," Mark DeVoss,
senior analyst for flash memory at research firm
iSuppli,
told
vnunet.com.
"Every time you add a new feature, like a music player or an Mpeg4 video
decoder, you have to add code. Now you can have the same code space, but more
data space, or more code and the same amount of data storage."
The chip, which is the first of Intel's M18 line of 65nm Flash chips, was
first unveiled in April.
"This is not an unanticipated announcement, but it is something we have been
waiting for in the industry," Celeste Crystal, senior research analyst at
IDC, told
vnunet.com.
Although the analyst believes that the chips will be used initially in
high-end phones, Crystal said that mid-level models could also take advantage of
the 1Gb chips as the technology becomes more widespread.
IDC pointed out that mobile phone makers, particularly in Japan and Korea,
have been stacking 512Mb NOR chips to obtain 1Gb of flash memory. The new chip
enables the same effect on a single chip.
"The density of our 1Gb product provides nearly double the storage for
multimedia files and enables ever-slimmer form-factor phones," said Darin
Billerbeck, vice president and general manager at Intel's Flash products group.
The smaller chips also provide for better battery life, according to Intel.
Crystal said that Intel and fellow chipmaker
STMicroelectronics
have an agreement to make their new chips 'drop-in compatible' with their
current 90nm models. This lets manufacturers integrate new chips from both
companies much more easily.
The analyst expects STMicroelectronics to introduce a similar NOR chip
shortly.
Intel plans to release 512Mb, 256Mb, and 128Mb M18 flash memory chips
sometime next year.
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