Noun
MRAM (countable and uncountable, plural MRAMs)
Initialism of magnetoresistive random access memory.
Newer non-volatile memory technologies such as FeRAM and MRAM are slowly replacing EEPROMs in some applications, but are expected to remain a small fraction of the EEPROM market for the foreseeable future. Source: Internet
It’s been several years since we checked on Everspin, but the company’s MRAM densities don’t appear to have changed in the interim. Source: Internet
In 2012, the company production of an 8Gb DRAM-compatible MRAM chip which was clocked at 800MHz and offered 64Mb of total capacity per stick — or just 8MB. Source: Internet
In the future, MRAM could potentially be used in microcontrollers as it has infinite endurance and its incremental semiconductor wafer process cost is relatively low. Source: Internet