Will PCMO bring the magic to memristor memory?
Memory has always been a fundamental challenge for the design of digital computers. The quest for the perfect digital storage medium started as soon as digital computers started to appear in the 1940s. Punched cards and paper tape, used in the design of ENIAC in 1945, were clearly too slow and limited. The first fully electronic memory relied on cathode-ray technology in the form of Williams-Kilburn tubes, which were used in the design of the Manchester Baby computer in 1948. These tubes stored a mere handful of bits using phosphor persistence as the storage medium. This technology was borrowed … Read More → "Will PCMO bring the magic to memristor memory?"

