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Technology Stocks : WDC/Sandisk Corporation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: gdichaz who wrote (6591)8/11/1999 4:42:00 AM
From: Tumbleweed  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 60323
 
Here's some more detail on the proposed new technology

What is the view on this? Where do the patents stand? IF this stuff is for real would Sandisk be able to utlise it in the same way it uses memory now, or would we be obsolete?
(Along with all the other memory and disk vendors)
Joe

+++
Keele High Density Claims 3D Storage Breakthrough

A UK start-up company has completed the patenting of a three
dimensional memory system it claims will revolutionize the computer
and storage business, offering vendors the chance to cram 2300GB of
data onto a PC Card-sized device costing as little as a conventional
CD-ROM drive. According to the technology's inventor, emeritus
professor of physics, Ted Williams, "it has been the dream of a
lot of people to produce three-dimensional memory." Now he says
that dream will become a commercial reality "very soon".

Williams, with the backing of London venture capital group,
Cavendish Management Resources (CMR), has set up Keele High Density,
a private company that he says is already in negotiations with a
number of major computer companies. Keele, named after the UK's Keele
University where Williams spent nine of the 13 years he has taken to
perfect his invention, will be purely a "licensing company"
said CMR managing director, Mike Downey.

Although Williams was loathe to reveal details of his invention, he
confirmed reports in a UK national newspaper that his hybrid memory
technology, which encompasses solid state, and magneto-optical
elements, can hold 86GB of data per square centimeter and deliver
read speeds of 100Mbps.

The current benchmark for pure magnetic drive technology was set by
IBM earlier this year when Big Blue's Almaden Laboratories
demonstrated a system offering 20GB per square inch - much less than
the per square centimeter rating of Keele's technology. In the
commercial space, the present average cost of magnetic systems is $18
per megabyte. Williams is talking of PC Card devices costing the
equivalent of a $50 CD-Drive that will hold 2300GB - at just over two
cents per gigabyte.

If Williams' calculations can be converted into real products,
Keele's technology could genuinely set the storage industry, and by
implication, much of the rest of the computer industry, on its head.

Much will depend on whether the implementation of the new technology
will require an equally great revolution in the production facilities
and integration systems of vendors. However, according to Downey,
while the hardware aspects of the technology do not conform to
existing industry standards, the technology is well understood and
will not require a sea change in production and implementation
techniques.

Indeed, Williams and Downey are anticipating rapid roll-out of the
technology once licensing agreements have been agreed. "We are
in conversation already with a number of the major computer companies
in the world. But the idea is that this [the technology] will be
generally available," Downey said.

Although CMR and Keele have not finalized their business plans,
Downey said it is likely that a principal manufacturing license may
be granted to a single company, but that any such agreement would
also demand that the company offers cross licensing opportunities to
other vendors