Sounds like a niche use-case for pizza delivery drivers stumbling into cryo chambers
But only if I get to look into the beautiful eye of my favorite purple haired friend
We already had this, it’s called Intel Optane Persistent Memory and Intel killed it off last year: https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/docs/memory-storage/optane-persistent-memory/overview.html
The memory speed was slightly slower than DDR4 but the benefits didn’t seem to outweigh the downsides. I think it probably kicked a lot of ass for specific use cases (eg. in-memory database that needs persistence), but the market was too small. Plus, SSDs are getting so ridiculously fast that it would put pressure on a product like this too.
Can’t wait for my ram to last 1000 years just for the hinge on my laptop screen to last 2 (guess what just broke on my laptop after 2 years)
guess what just broke on my laptop after 2 years
I’m guessing it was the floppy drive?
The whole thing is floppy now.
That’s what she said
Perfect for when civilization collapses and we have to do some wasteland 2 shenannigans to get the lost knowledge of the past back by hoarding laptops.
And then you find out they were mainly working from the cloud.
Shout out to whoever picked that thumbnail image.
I don’t think a battery, soldering joints or displays would last that long…
I love the security implications of this. /s
I have to regretfully say I would have had an apocalypse bingo but I didn’t have “Laptop of Dorian Gray” on my scorecard
So basically just a quicker SSD for systemctl hibernate?
Now… Let’s see what 1000 years of cosmic radiation does to the data.
Have you tried turning it off and on again?
Of course, this is still a new and emerging technology and it’s too early to say when we might see it in our devices, or how much it will cost.
Looks really cool, buy yeah my guess is i will cost to much to be viable for most things.
Maybe it could be good for moving and storing servers?
I don’t understand the point of this. That’s what the hard drive I for. The RAM is meant to be wiped.
RAM is not meant to be wiped. It’s just we haven’t found a way to make it constant, but still as quick as it is now.
Yeah. I mean, sometimes RAM getting “wiped” is a “feature”, e.g., you don’t want somebody to be able to pull information from RAM after you shut off your computer… but that’s not really what it’s designed for (and you can recover data from powered off RAM in some lucky cases). It’d be sweet if we could have fast non-volatile memory. Having a computer use 0 power when suspended and not having to worry about hibernating to disk would be sweet! I do kind of wonder about the security RAMifications of that, but I guess it’s not much worse than having a laptop suspended currently.