Commenting on those storming figures (page five) that must have left Alan Sugar feeling that he might have been a bit hasty in selling Amstrad Plc’s 9% stake in the company, Boise, Idaho-based Micron Technology Inc said its soaring third quarter and nine month results were principally down to favourable market conditions and higher volumes […]
Commenting on those storming figures (page five) that must have left Alan Sugar feeling that he might have been a bit hasty in selling Amstrad Plc’s 9% stake in the company, Boise, Idaho-based Micron Technology Inc said its soaring third quarter and nine month results were principally down to favourable market conditions and higher volumes of memory chips sold – it increased wafer capacity and improved manufacturing yields, principally for the 4M-bit parts; it is still gearing up to put 16Ms into volume production and warns that a rapid transition to 16Ms as the industry’s primary product without significant improvement in the company’s manufacturing yields would have a negative impact on the company’s results of operation.