
Laurence Marchini, Editor, writes:
We see from your search that you're looking for information on the term "MRAM", and we have a large number of manufacturers' news releases and technical articles here on Electronicstalk which will be of interest. Let me be your guide.
Start with the news release Technologies pave way for magnetoresistive RAM from Toshiba Electronics Europe, which we summarised at the time by saying "Spin transfer switching and perpendicular magnetic anisotropy technologies are demonstrated in a magnetic tunnel junction". A few weeks before, we featured the news release Ferroelectric RAM runs up to 2Mbit density from Ramtron International: "High density FRAM device targets SRAM-based industrial control, metering, medical, automotive, military, gaming and computing applications".
In June 2007, we covered the news from Freescale Semiconductor concerning its MR0A16A and MR2A16AV - take a look at More options for magnetoresistive RAM which says: "New devices include extended temperature range nonvolatile RAM targeting rugged application environments, such as industrial, military, aerospace and automotive designs".
Take a look also at the news release from Silicon Laude, MRAM emulator aids ASIC prototyping, as well as