If anyone could do it, He will be the Nobel Prize Winner. Practically NO!!
On-chip memory is a memory that resides on microcontroller itself. e.g RAM. It may be one of the Internal RAM or Special Function Register (SFR). Off-chip memory is external ROM or EPROM.
system on a chip
60 gigs in a memory chip is a HUGE amount. (As far as I know, no one builds a 60 gig memory chip). Conversely, a 60 gig hard drive is pretty minimal by current standards.
The largest memory in one chip is 4 GB
On the left side of the phone there are two slots, the one lower down is for memory stick.
I would think so. If you take a memory chip from one camera and use it in another the pictures transfer. Why wouldn't it in a phone?
microcomputer or maybe system on a chip, which has one or more microprocessors, memory, and input/output devices all on same chip.
It depends on how wide the data buses are on each chip, and how they're connected. If they're one byte wide, you could need over 256 million addresses, one for each byte. if they're wider, and connected to show an even wider combined data bus, it could be much less; around 32 million.
You upgrade your RAM on your computer by buying RAM expansion cards for your computer. You then would have to open your computer case and you look for what look like rectangle shaped slots that are on the motherboard. These are called expansion slots and you would slide the RAM expansion card in one of these slots till the card is all the way in. You will want to put some force while putting the card in to make sure that it is properly seated in the expansion slot but you will want to also be gentle as the cards are pretty delicate and even a chip could cause it to not work properly.
a) To provide a memory capacity of 4096 bytes using 256x8 RAM chips, you need 4096 bytes / 256 bytes per chip = 16 chips. b) Each memory address for the 256 locations in a chip will require 8 bits (since 2^8 = 256). Therefore, each chip will require 8 address lines to select one of the 256 locations.
speed compatability maximum memory allowed
According to the minds at the Scientific American, The human brain can store up to 2.5 Petabytes of information. This is equivalent to one million gigabytes.