Showing posts with label Flash. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flash. Show all posts
January 09, 2018

The largest prime number ever discovered is 23 million digits long

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A citizen science project has identified the largest known prime number, made up of more than 23 million digits(Credit: mmaxer/Depositphotos)

Numbers might not sound like they need discovering, but a crowd-sourced project has now identified the largest prime number known. The number was discovered by the Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search (GIMPS), an online project of citizen scientists who spot and verify prime numbers using specialty software. It's been dubbed M77232917 – and if you're wondering why it needs a codename, well, we'd be here all day typing out the 23 million digits that make it up. 
If it's been a while since high school math class, here's a quick refresher: Prime numbers are those that are only divisible by 1 and themselves. Small primes are fairly easy to identify through trial and error – 6 can be divided by 2 and 3, so it isn't prime, but 7 is – but as you look at larger and larger numbers it gets less obvious. It might take you a while to figure out, for example, that 11,319,033 isn't prime because it can be divided by 213 and 53,141. Finding the really large primes is a task best left up to computers running software like GIMPS.
As the MP in its acronym suggests, GIMPS is specifically searching for a rare class of prime numbers called Mersenne Primes. These are numbers that are one less than a power of 2, expressed as Mn = 2n - 1. That means that the newcomer M77232917 is calculated through a chain of 77,232,917 twos, and then subtracting 1. It's only the 50th known Mersenne Prime ever identified, and it's made up of 23,249,425 digits.
It was discovered on December 26, 2017 by electrical engineer Jonathan Pace, and it initially took six days of non-stop number crunching to show that it was indeed a prime number. Pace was using a consumer-level PC running an Intel i5-6600 processor, and after it was identified it was then independently verified by other users, with a range of other programs and hardware setups.
So what can we use this new number for? Not much, really. It mostly seems to be a curiosity for amateur mathematicians hoping for "the thrill of possibly discovering a record-setting, rare, and historic new Mersenne Prime." But then again, we didn't really have much use for prime numbers at all until relatively recently, and the Mersenne project points out that now they're the basis of cryptography algorithms.
If M77232917 isn't specific enough for you, you can download the numberitself as a plain text file – a 23 MB plain text file, we might add. Grab a coffee, because you'll be scrolling through it for a while.
Source: GIMPS, NewAtlas

December 06, 2017

Samsung begins production on 512 GB flash storage for smartphones

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Samsung has begun mass production of a new 512 GB eUFS chip, which will increase the... 
Samsung has begun mass production of a new 512 GB eUFS chip, which will increase the storage capacity of future smartphones(Credit: Samsung)
Samsung has started mass production of new embedded Universal Flash Storage (eUFS) chips, which should bump up the storage capacity of future smartphones to a more capacious 512 GB. The chips can reportedly double the density of storage in the same amount of physical space as the previous unit.
Samsung has been producing V-NAND devices for the last few years, which are three-dimensional stacks of flash storage chips. This newest device is made up of eight 64-layer V-NAND chips and a controller chip, which will boost the storage capacity of the eUFS up to 512 GB. That's twice the storage capacity of the previous model, which contained 48 layers.
For reference, Samsung says a user could store about 1,300 minutes of 4K video on a device built with the new eUFS, which is about 10 times more than can be crammed onto a Samsung Galaxy S8.

The new eUFC can also read and write faster, with its sequential read speeds peaking at 860 MB/s, and write speeds of up to 255 MB/s. According to the company, that means a 5 GB video file could be transferred to an SSD in about six seconds. The power management technology in the new device has also been updated, in order to keep the increase in energy consumption to a minimum.
Samsung says it plans to aggressively produce these new 512 GB V-NAND chips to cover demand, as well as stepping up production of the existing 256 GB model.
 Source: Samsung, NewAtlas