Posts Tagged ‘Solid State Memory’

At CES 2026, SK hynix Makes Its Case for the Future of AI Memory

SK hynix Makes Its Case for the Future of AI Memory

I was in the CES 2026 press room when SK hynix laid out its next-gen AI memory roadmap

Las Vegas always has noise, but the CES press rooms are different. They’re quieter, more technical, and the people in the seats are listening for one thing: what ships, what scales, and what changes procurement decisions six months from now. On January 6, 2026, SK hynix stepped up in that setting and made its message pretty clear — the next cycle of AI hardware is going to be memory-constrained, and they intend to be the company defining the memory stack.

The announcement centered on a dedicated customer exhibition hall at the Venetian Expo (January 6–9), with the theme “Innovative AI, Sustainable Tomorrow.” The phrase is marketing, sure — but the product list underneath it was not. They framed the whole show around AI-optimized memory, and they backed that up with a mix of high-bandwidth memory, low-power modules for servers, client-side DRAM, and a NAND story that’s directly aimed at AI data centers.

HBM4 was the headline in the room

The first thing everyone keyed in on was HBM. SK hynix said it is showing a next-generation HBM product described as a 16-high 48GB HBM4. They positioned it as the follow-on to the 12-high 36GB HBM4 they’ve already talked about, and they made a point of saying the work is being driven by customer requirements.

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Flash Memory Market Not Yet Saturated

kingston ceoDespite many industry players believing both the memory card and USB drive markets are saturated, Kingston Technology company president John Tu recently said substantial business potential still exists. Citing average monthly shipments of 20 million units for both memory cards and USB drives, Tu said the huge shipments imply that these markets are still growing. He thinks memory cards and USB drives serve as a “platform” for consumers to interact with different kinds of content. While many people think memory device makers should pay digital content providers in order to add content to their products, Tu said it should be the providers paying Kingston to distribute content via its well-established sales network, brand and market share. He added in saying that shipments of both memory cards and USB drives are set to expand further in the future. However, Kingston remains cautious about solid-state drives (SSDs). Tu stressed that the company will only tap into segments it is certain will grow, but once it extends a presence, it will produce in big volumes in order to grab a large share of the market quickly. Kingston believes this is the business strategy it is good at. He recalled the deployment in NAND flash as an example, saying that Kingston only made its decision when the market proved to have substantial potential. Source + Photo: Digital Times. Continue Reading

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