A company called Freescale has unveiled a new kind of RAM called MRAM, for magnetresistive random-access memory. Unlike regular memory chips, which lose all their data once the computer's power is shut off, these chips retain all their data. They plan on marketing them for automotive and industrial purposes first, as they read quickly and are very durable.
Freescale maintains that they should be able to put them into personal computers eventually, and since they don't lose their data after powering down, it will all but eliminate startup time. Which is great, unless your RAM is full of crap and you're restarting for just that reason. But by the time this reaches market (the chips are starting at 4 megabits, so it's gonna be a while) they should have some sort of workaround. Still, a big day for the computer industry and the nerd community at large.
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