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Technology Stocks : SILICON STORAGE SSTI Flash Mem -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: James Strauss who wrote (249)7/19/1998 8:24:00 PM
From: flickerful  Respond to of 1881
 
jim...

the weekly recap from PC Briefs....

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A.,
1998 JUL 16 (NB) -- By Craig Menefee, Newsbytes.
This is a roundup of news involving desktop PCs, peripherals, software and related items, together with World Wide Web sources for more information when appropriate. In today's edition, Autodesk takes down some pirates, Jian upgrades its marketing-helper software, Fairchild Semi opens in Osaka, "Solly" continues to court IBM antivirus customers who don't want to switch to Symantec and SST's SuperFlash memory products are coming due for some shrinks.

<<SST SuperFlash Memory Shrink Map Revealed

SUNNYVALE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A. Silicon Storage Technology (SST), Inc. has revealed its roadmap for SuperFlash memory at 0.33 micron, 0.26 micron, 0.18 micron and 0.15 micron geometries over the next five years. SuperFlash memory is hot right now for systems-on-a-chip development, and the smaller the embedded flash memory cell size, the faster and cooler a system can run. SST says it now has licensing agreements in place with wafer foundry suppliers including IBM (see separate story in yesterday's Newsbytes), Samsung, Sanyo, Seiko Epson and TSMC.>>



To: James Strauss who wrote (249)7/19/1998 8:42:00 PM
From: flickerful  Respond to of 1881
 
jim.

please note
for your information...
exchange2000.com

have a look across the board on friday....
ALL memory semis DOWN except micron.

randy



To: James Strauss who wrote (249)7/19/1998 9:29:00 PM
From: Smilodon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1881
 
I can't link to the report, but will try to get a copy to post.

They did not downgrade since they were already at a hold. If I can't post the report, I will post the estimates and basic information.

Regards,

Archer



To: James Strauss who wrote (249)7/19/1998 11:49:00 PM
From: flickerful  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1881
 
jim...

and wherever IBM went,
MOTOROLA was sure to follow...

07/19 11:57 AMD, Motorola in technology exchange alliance

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -
Advanced Micro Devices Inc. and Motorola Inc. are expected to unveil a strategic technology-sharing alliance on Monday, with AMD expected to use Motorola's copper process technology to make faster chips, industry sources said.

The companies said in a news advisory that they will be announcing a strategic alliance Monday that will affect the embedded and desktop microprocessor markets. A spokesman for AMD, based in Sunnyvale, Calif., said he could not make any comment beyond the news advisory.

Motorola officials in Schaumburg, Ill. could not be reached for comment.

But industry sources said AMD and Motorola are engaged in a technology exchange pact that will include Motorola sharing its copper process so AMD can develop faster microprocessors, using copper in the manufacturing process.

Motorola, in return, will gain access to AMD's flash memory products, to incorporate flash memory in its embedded processors, for faster embedded chips. Embedded processors are designed for specific functions, such as printing, and it is one area where Motorola's PowerPC chip has made big inroads.

Copper technology has been widely touted by many in the semiconductor industry as a future way to design faster chips.

International Business Machines Corp. created a stir in the industry when it announced it created faster, lower-cost semiconductors using copper instead of aluminum as an electrical conducting property.

Since then, other companies, including Motorola, have also announced copper technology processes.


Advanced Micro Devices needs to find ways to make its microprocessors even more competitive with Intel Corp., which is spending about $4.5 billion on capital expenditures this year, which includes its manufacturing facilities.

Analysts speculated Motorola will use AMD's flash memory and other AMD technologies such as embedded networking to build system-on-a-chip processors, with more functions on one chip, for low-cost, small, hand-held computing devices.

"They will integrate it with the system peripheral core, and they can go after the system-on-a-chip market," said Ashok Kumar, a Piper Jaffray analyst. "They can then go after the very low price point market."

Earlier this week, IBM announced an agreement with Silicon Storage Technology Inc. of Sunnyvale to license Silicon Storage's SuperFlash memory technology. IBM said it plans to combine logic and memory functions on a single chip.

As new chip fabrication plants become more expensive to build, analysts said they expect more collaborative deals between chip makers, especially during the current industry slump.

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