Memory supplier Micron exits consumer market to chase AI
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When I began forgetting words in midlife, I wondered if it was menopause—and worried that it was something more.
An acute global shortage of memory chips is forcing artificial intelligence and consumer-electronics companies to fight for dwindling supplies, as prices soar for the unglamorous but essential components that allow devices to store data.
Want to learn more quickly, and retain more of what you learn? Neuroscience says boosting your memory is relatively easy.
“As you might remember, my husband, Tyler Henry, underwent brain surgery in May 2025,” he captioned the social media post. “However, over the past month, symptoms of swelling returned. Tyler’s medical team decided another surgery to address the recurring cyst and swelling was the best option.”
There's a smarter way to save important nuggets of information, and the iPhone already offers the fundamental stack to do it with some AI assistance.
Michael Bangerter tells PEOPLE he felt "exhausted" and "a little helpless" after countless hours of his 2-month-old Lola crying
DEAR ERIC: I have a good friend whose memory seems to me to be slipping. She laughs it off, saying she has so much going on that she can’t remember things, but I think there is something else happening.
A new children's book aimed at encouraging school pupils to engage with the Scots language has been written in memory of a Dumfries woman. The Lois Sherret Trust was founded in memory of the 40-year-old, who died from bile duct cancer in April 2022.
Ant Anstead spent Thanksgiving with his son Hudson, posting photos and videos of the 'core memory' the two shared on the holiday on Instagram.
Meanwhile, US company Micron is planning to invest nearly $10 billion in a new DRAM facility in Japan. But that won't be shipping out memory chips until the second half of 2028. Tech Insight therefore concludes that the memory supply crisis will " continue beyond 2028 ".