CONNECT WITH US
NEWS TAGGED 16GB
Wednesday 17 November 2010
NAND flash contract price decline intensifies
NAND flash contract prices have continued to decline in early November 2010. Prices for 64Gb and 16Gb MLC products dropped more than 7% and 8Gb MLC products fell 10-14% largely due...
Thursday 16 September 2010
iPad, iPhone fail to halt NAND flash price drops in 1H September
Despite brisk sales of iPads and iPhones, contract prices for mainstream MLC NAND flash chips remained on a downward trend in the first half of September, according to sources at...
Tuesday 3 August 2010
Prices for 16Gb NAND flash rise on reduced output
Industry sources in Taiwan speculate that several major NAND flash producers have stopped offering or reduced their output of 16Gb NAND flash, resulting in a recent rally in prices...
Friday 11 June 2010
Contract quotes for 16Gb and 32Gb NAND flash stabilize in early June
Contract quotes for 16Gb and 32Gb NAND flash chips have shown signs of stabilizing in the first half of June 2010 as Apple stepped up the procurement of NAND flash parts. The increased...
Tuesday 18 August 2009
China market: White-box handset makers gearing up launch of smartphones with 16GB NAND flash
China-based white-box handset manufacturers are gearing up the launch of smartphones integrating 16GB NAND flash memory in the third quarter of 2009 in the face of iPhone's possible...
Thursday 25 June 2009
NAND flash contract prices to turn soft in July, says DRAMeXchange
Contract prices for mainstream 8Gb and 16Gb MLC NAND flash chips have stayed flat at an average of US$3.52 and US$4.06, respectively, in the second half of June, according to data...
Thursday 23 April 2009
Renesas adds 16KB low-cost versions to expand SH/Tiny flash microcontrollers
Renesas Technology America has added 16KB flash versions to its line-up of low pin count SH/Tiny flash microcontrollers. The lower memory versions provide a more flexible and cost-effective...
Thursday 19 March 2009
Samsung starts shipping 16GB DDR3 modules for servers
Samsung Electronics has announced that shipments of what it claims to be the world's first and smallest high-density memory modules based on 2Gb, 50nm-class DDR3 have kicked off.