С помощью текста надо различать истинное и ложное: Flash memory's history includes...

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С помощью текста надо различать истинное и ложное:
Flash memory's history includes rapidly increasing capacity, ever smaller physical sizes, continually falling prices. Is it true?
Tunneling electrons don't change the gate's electronic charge in "a flash". Is it true?
NAND flash reads and writes chaotically at high speed handling data in small blocks called pages. Is it true?
Moving many small files could further upgrade transfer rates. Is it true?
USB drives encapsulate flash with a memory controller in a bog package, offering high capacity, quick transfer rates, flexibility and much convenience. Is it true?
Memory cards have evolved from the match book-size Compact Flash cards introduced in 1994. Is it true?
Solid state drives, the newest flash memory application can replace a computer's flash memory drive. Is it true?
Traditional hard drives currently offer greater capacity but for a higher price. Is it true?
Flash memory is usually inside your smartphone, but outside GPS, mP3 player and other devices. Is it true?
Solid state drives using flash memory don't always replace hard drives in netbooks and PC's. Is it true?


Computerworld June 7, 2010
Flash memory is inside your smartphone, GPS, MP3 player, digital camera, PC and the USB drive on your key chain. Solid-state drives (SSD) using flash memory are replacing hard drives in netbooks and PCs and even some server installations. Needing no batteries or other power to retain data, flash is convenient and relatively foolproof.

Flash memory is a solid-state chip that maintains stored data without any external power source. It is commonly used in portable electronics and removable storage devices, and to replace com-puter hard drives.

As with other solid-state technologies, flash memory's history includes rapidly increasing capacity, ever-smaller physical sizes and continually falling prices.

Flash memory is a type of electronically erasable programmable read-only memory (EEPROM), memory chips that retain information without requiring power. (This is different from flash RAM, which does need power to retain data.) Regular EEPROM erases content byte by byte; most flash memory erases data in whole blocks, making it suitable for use with applications where large amounts of data require frequent updates. Inside the flash chip, data is stored in cells protected by floating gates. Tunneling electrons change the gate's electronic charge in "a flash" (hence the name), clearing the cell of its contents so it can be rewritten.

Flash memory devices use two different logical technologies -- NOR and NAND -- to map data. NOR flash provides high-speed random access, reading and writing data in specific memory lo-cations; it can retrieve as little as a single byte. NOR is used to store cell phones' operating systems; it's also used in computers for the BIOS program that runs at start-up.

NAND flash reads and writes sequentially at high speed, handling data in small blocks called pages. This flash is used in solid-state and USB flash drives, digital cameras, audio and video players, and TV set-top boxes. NAND flash reads faster than it writes, quickly transferring whole pages of data. Less expensive than NOR flash, NAND technology offers higher capacity for the same-size silicon.

As a NAND chip wears out, erase/program operations slow down considerably, causing more retries and bad block remapping. Moving many small files could further degrade transfer rates. Catastrophic failure happens only with extended use (after thousands of writes and accesses); periodic backup and replacement forestall this problem.

USB drives: Introduced in 2002, USB drives encapsulate flash with a memory controller in a small package offering high capacity, fast transfer rates, flexibility and convenience; some feature built-in hardware encryption and password protection. Compared with floppy or optical drives, USB flash drives store more data and provide easy file transfer between most devices with a USB interface.

In December 2004, Computerworld described a 2GB flash drive selling for more than $400; nowadays, 2GB devices can commonly be found for under $10. This February, Kingston Tech-nology Corp. announced U.S. availability of a 256GB flash drive -- the biggest yet -- for $1,100.

Memory cards: These have evolved from the matchbook-size CompactFlash cards introduced in 1994 through 2001's postage-stamp-size Secure Digital cards to the latest miniSD and microSD cards, with higher capacities and faster transfer speeds at every step.

Solid-state drives: The newest flash memory application, SSDs can replace a computer's hard drive. They have no moving parts, so mechanical failure is near zero. Solid-state drives are quieter and smaller than hard drives, and they provide faster response, access and boot-up times but consume much less power and run cooler. Traditional hard drives currently offer greater ca-pacity and a lower price, but this will likely change.


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Flash memory's history includes rapidly increasing capacity, ever smaller physical sizes, continually falling prices. True
Tunneling electrons don't change the gate's electronic charge in "a flash". False
NAND flash reads and writes chaotically at high speed handling data in small blocks called pages. False
Moving many small files could further upgrade transfer rates. True
USB drives encapsulate flash with a memory controller in a bog package, offering high capacity, quick transfer rates, flexibility and much convenience. False
Memory cards have evolved from the match book-size Compact Flash cards introduced in 1994. True
Solid state drives, the newest flash memory application can replace a computer's flash memory drive. True
Traditional hard drives currently offer greater capacity but for a higher price. False
Flash memory is usually inside your smartphone, but outside GPS, mP3 player and other devices. False
Solid state drives using flash memory don't always replace hard drives in netbooks and PC's. False

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