I head about it years back and hoped that by now we’d have MRAM computers that could be powered on and off like flipping a light switch. The magnetic memory being able to hold its state with no power, leads to that idea that the booted-up state could be returned to instantly from power-off.
I feel like we are never going to go beyond improvements (often notable ones) in DRAM and NAND. There is just too much industry and ecosystem momentum behind these technology approaches.
I head about it years back and hoped that by now we’d have MRAM computers that could be powered on and off like flipping a light switch. The magnetic memory being able to hold its state with no power, leads to that idea that the booted-up state could be returned to instantly from power-off.
I feel like we are never going to go beyond improvements (often notable ones) in DRAM and NAND. There is just too much industry and ecosystem momentum behind these technology approaches.