DocumentCode
3611277
Title
Battling borked bits
Author
Stefanovici, Ioan ; Hwang, Andy ; Schroeder, Bianca
Volume
52
Issue
12
fYear
2015
fDate
12/1/2015 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
34
Lastpage
53
Abstract
Not long after the first personal computers started entering people´s homes, Intel fell victim to a nasty kind of memory error. The company, which had commercialized the very first dynamic random-access memory (DRAM) chip in 1971 with a 1,024-bit device, was continuing to increase data densities. A few years later, Intel´s then cutting-edge 16-kilobit DRAM chips were sometimes storing bits differently from the way they were written. Indeed, they were making these mistakes at an alarmingly high rate. The cause was ultimately traced to the ceramic packaging for these DRAM devices. Trace amounts of radioactive material that had gotten into the chip packaging were emitting alpha particles and corrupting the data.
Keywords
DRAM chips; ceramic packaging; DRAM glitches; Intel 16-kilobit DRAM chips; borked bits; ceramic packaging; chip packaging; memory error-avoidance schemes; Computer crashes; Error correction codes; Google; Hardware; Random access memory; Supercomputers;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Spectrum, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9235
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MSPEC.2015.7335798
Filename
7335798
Link To Document