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Matrix Semiconductor Inc. has used its write-once 3-D technology to make what it says is the world’s smallest memory chip. The move could lead to cheaper one-use memory cards, the company said.
Today, Beyond Work, an enterprise AI company, announced the record-setting results of Matrix, a novel memory-augmented AI framework for automating business document processing. Developed in ...
The company’s main products include its memory-efficient chiplet-based D-Matrix Corsair platform, which is the world’s first ...
Plans call for introduction of the company's first device, a 64-Mbyte write-once memory chip called the Matrix 3-D Memory, in the first half. The "consumable memory" chip is expected to compete with ...
LONDON Matrix Semiconductor Inc. (Santa Clara, Calif.) a provider of multilayer, antifuse-based one-time programmable ROM, said Tuesday (May 10) it had developed the world's smallest 1-Gbit memory.
d-Matrix is building a new way of doing datacenter AI inferencing at scale using in-memory computing (IMC) techniques with chiplet level scale-out interconnects.
Matrix's chips, in quantities of 1,000, cost about $9 each. Equivalent flash memory chips cost about $15 each. "We can make memory chips that are a lot denser and therefore cheaper," Steere said.
Matrix, a novel memory-augmented AI framework for automating business document processing. Developed in collaboration with researchers from Penn State University, Oregon State University, and ...