Not exact matches
Ian Ainsworth, a senior vice-president and portfolio manager with Mackenzie Investments, is particularly bullish on
Flash technology, a kind of
memory chip that stores information in portable devices
such as phones, tablets and USB drives.
As worldwide development manager for California - based Intel, the world's largest semiconductor maker, Clarke extols the
memory retention of
flash chips — which can store data even when their power is off — and their other virtues,
such as hardiness, high data density and low power consumption.
The company unsurprisingly didn't name any specific models but its upcoming Galaxy S9 Android flagships are prime candidates for showcasing
such a storage solution, especially since their top models aren't likely to be in high demand compared to the base versions, i.e. the fact that mass production of the
chips only started in December shouldn't prevent Samsung from delivering a limited quantity of handsets with 512 GB of internal
flash memory come late winter.