Overheard in the tech blogosphere:

flash memory

Jul 13 2008   8:07PM GMT

Overheard: The future of NAND



Posted by: Margaret Rouse
Technology, flash memory, Memory, Apple
umpc.jpg Removable flash applications, such as cards for cell phones, drive the bulk of today’s NAND market.

NAND growth through 2012 will be driven by the computing segment, such as hybrid drives, and solid-state drives going into notebooks, UMPCs, servers, mobile and enterprise storage and data centers.

Ciol, NAND market: Where’s Apple?

I had to look up the acronym UMPC. It stands for ultra-mobile personal computer.

Jul 8 2008   9:59AM GMT

Overheard: Hacking flash



Posted by: Margaret Rouse
flash memory, Storage, Security
brick3.jpg With normal memory and normal hard-disks, you can rewrite the contents trillions of times without concern. With flash memory, after rewriting data a few hundred thousand times, the block goes bad. It’s quite easy to intentionally write a program that would continuously overwrite a block of flash until it failed.

Robert Graham, Hacking Flash Memory

At my previous employer, we found vulnerabilities in Cisco routers that would potentially allow us to create a worm. As part of our threat modeling, we considered what would happen if such a worm were to intentionally destroy the flash in a Cisco router. These routers boot from flash, so all the worm had to do was continuously overwrite the boot sector, then the router would no longer be able to boot. The flash in many (if not most) Cisco routers is soldered in. Therefore, destroying the flash would “brick” the device.

If you “brick” a device, that’s like “toasting” a device. You break it. Permanently. It’s toast. It’s a brick.