On MovieTome: Top Ten: Most Bizarre Twilight Merch
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

January 22nd, 2008

100 GB memory chip coming in 2009

Posted by Robin Harris @ 10:16 pm

Categories: Solid State Disk

Tags: Memory Chip, Chip, Semiconductors, Network Technology, Hardware, Networking, Robin Harris

Bytes, not bits. Oh, and it’s fast, too.
Nanochip, a Silicon Valley-based fabless semiconductor firm, just received $14 million in funding to complete work on a 100 GB storage chip. Intel Capital, who should know something about chips, is an investor. The goal: “. . . allow Nanochip to complete development of its first prototypes later this year . . . .”

MEMSy were the borogoves . . .
The Nanochip design is a Micro-Electro-Mechanical System, or MEMS, device. A descendent of IBM’s Millipede device, it uses polarization instead of Millepede’s heat to store data.

An array of tiny probes - looking like phonograph needles, if any of you have ever seen one - less than 25 um in diameter, changes the state of the recording medium. The probes are movable - similar to the mirrors on DLP chips - so they can write more than one location. Since there are many thousands of probes, they have a lot of bandwidth.

Update: this is persistent storage, i.e. it retains data with the power off. The Millipede design proposed using a heat-sensitive polymer to create little CD-like pits to record data. They couldn’t get that to work so now they are using an electrical method.

Here’s a scanning electron microscope picture of a probe:

read_write_chip.jpg
graphic courtesy of Nanochip

Double your fun
The chip is actually 2 chips bonded together. One chip has the array of probes and the other has the media. They are bonded, diced and then mounted in traditional plastic packaging.

The really cool thing is that they can use 10 year old, fully depreciated, fab equipment to build these chips. They don’t need deep UV technology or any of the other costly tricks chip makers use today to scrunch chip sizes. A 1 micron fab is fine. That should translate into much lower costs.

The design is scalable to 1 TB chips, according to Nanochip. How cool is that?

The Storage Bits take
The MEMS-based memory device idea has been around for over a decade, but no one has yet figured out how to produce reliable devices in volume. This funding round shows that the VCs are seeing light at the end of the tunnel.

I sure hope they are right.

Comments welcome, as always. Update: Hilarious take on the mathematics of a 100 GB chip. Cool! Realistically, I’m sure they’ll use some ECC to protect the data.

Robin HarrisRobin Harris has been messing with computers for over 30 years and selling and marketing data storage for over 20 in companies large and small. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.


Email Robin Harris

Subscribe to Storage Bits via Email alerts or RSS.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 51 Talkback(s)
Yes, it does.
Volatile: No. The memory is semi-permanent.

Bits or Bytes: Bytes. He says that.

Die shrink: This part does not need die-shrink. It uses one-micro-meter fab to keep costs down.
... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Master Dave Posted on: 03/11/08 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Tip of the hat  TheTruthGiver | 01/22/08
With compliments like that, who needs critics!  tr7oy | 01/23/08
It was of high value to me...  BlazingEagle | 02/22/08
Challenge to Optical Disks  A.Sinic | 01/23/08
I've been saying this for years  voska1 | 01/23/08
New Format Idea  adelacuesta | 01/23/08
Already there dude  kckn4fun | 01/23/08
100GB memory chip  rahart@... | 01/23/08
I am not sure I see your math...  mrOSX | 01/23/08
HD-DVD/BluRay Battle is over  NamelessFor Now | 01/23/08
Blu-Ray is far from winning the masses  voska1 | 01/23/08
Smarter than...? I don't think so.  tr7oy | 01/23/08
Quite correct. That is why it is futile to try new and  hkommedal | 01/23/08
Not matter the format...  BlazingEagle | 02/22/08
Looks like the HD-DVD/Blu-Ray Battle HAS BEEN OVER...  Jeff Hayes | 01/23/08
I think this will eventually overtake optical mediums...  BlazingEagle | 02/22/08
RE: 100 GB memory chip coming in 2009  kenner.costen@... | 01/23/08
Except you'll . . .  JLHenry | 01/25/08
Think RF. Think further...  Master Dave | 03/11/08
UPR and others  grey_eminence | 01/23/08
100GB chip!  ramey@... | 01/23/08
1 TB memory chip... hmmm  tcole@... | 01/23/08
Great!... If.....  reedjjjr | 01/23/08
Already there guy  kckn4fun | 01/23/08
Ummm, your math is a little off though  dellpj@... | 01/23/08
Why to limit to laptop only?  batia | 01/23/08
Actually standard DVD (Video) is 9gb.  mrOSX | 01/23/08
While true  voska1 | 01/23/08
I agree with that...  mrOSX | 01/23/08
Nope  dellpj@... | 01/28/08
But this is ONE HUNDRED GB!  BlazingEagle | 02/22/08
All well and good... Except...  Wolfie2K3 | 01/23/08
RE: 100 GB memory chip coming in 2009  markyannone | 01/23/08
100 GB?  markyannone | 01/23/08
the story doesn't mention power'd or not  gthonerfelt@... | 01/23/08
Yes, it does.  Master Dave | 03/11/08
You Think Vista Might Be Faster Using This Chip?  itanalyst | 01/23/08
WIndows 7 will be  batia | 01/23/08
Whatever happened to holographic storage?  dorkiedorkfromdorktown | 01/23/08
Yeah??!!??  JayBee51 | 01/23/08
Holographic storage:  dwatkins | 01/23/08
Comparisons are moot  tradergeorge | 01/23/08
Comparisons are moot  tigerpaw | 01/23/08
No moving parts?  reedjjjr | 01/23/08
Failure is a part of innovation  tradergeorge | 01/24/08
RE: 100 GB memory chip coming in 2009  jlafitte | 01/23/08
great idea, sparse info  Drakaran | 01/24/08
Finally, SSD capacity that can compete with hard drive capacity  John Musbach | 01/24/08
Asimov's 3 laws?  Drakaran | 01/28/08
RE: 100 GB memory chip coming in 2009  josesito_16_61@... | 01/30/08
Message has been deleted.  josesito_16_61@... | 01/30/08

What do you think?

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

Click Here
advertisement
Click Here

Recent Entries

advertisement

Archives

Favorite Links

ZDNet Blogs

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads