Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In February 2013, Tokyo court and Elpida creditors approved an acquisition by Micron Technology. [13] The company became a fully owned subsidiary of Micron Technology on July 31, 2013. [14] Effective February 28, 2014, Elpida changed its name to Micron Memory Japan and Elpida Akita changed its name to Micron Akita, Inc. [3]
In the 2012 to 2014 period, Micron again went through an acquisition-layoff cycle, becoming the majority shareholder of Inotera Memories, purchasing Elpida Memory [33] for $2 billion and the remaining shares in Rexchip, a PC memory chip manufacturing venture between Powerchip and Elpida Memory for $334 million, [34] [35] while announcing plans ...
On Tuesday, Micron Technology confirmed that it has obtained antitrust clearance from China's Ministry of Commerce for its acquisition of DRAM memory maker Elpida Memory. Pre-merger approvals had ...
In 2002 Kingston launched a patented memory tester and a new HyperX line of high-performance memory modules, and also patented EPOC chip-stacking technology. In August of that year, Kingston made a $50 million investment in Elpida and launched a green initiative for module manufacturing. In 2004, Kingston announced revenues of $1.8B for 2003.
Many investors scoff at Micron Technology because it works in a commoditized memory chip market plagued by brutal price wars. The supply-and-demand balance is the plaything of market giants ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
NEC, Hitachi, later Elpida Memory (went bankrupt, bought by Micron) Mitsubishi, later Elpida; Siemens, spun off Infineon Technologies, spun off Qimonda (went bankrupt, IP bought by Micron and others [7]) Inotera, bought by Micron; Intel ; Mostek; Mosel Vitelic Inc (ProMOS Technologies spun off from Mosel Vitelic)
In February 2014, as a result of its acquisition of Elpida, Micron Technology added 2 Gb and 4 Gb GDDR5 products into the company's portfolio of graphics memory solutions. [19] As of January 15, 2015, Samsung announced in a press release that it had begun mass production of "8 Gb" (8 × 1024 3 bits) GDDR5 memory chips based on a 20 nm ...