On Thursday 04 October 2007, Liviu Andronic wrote: > And later on: "Now one problem is > left. Even with normal RAM a well funded organisation can get the > contents after the system is powered off. With the modern SDRAM it's > even worse, where the data stays on the RAM permanently until new > data is written.
Pray tell, how does RAM manage to retain data when the power is off? It's either six transistors or one transistor and a cap per cell = not persistent. I don't know of any magic persistent RAM that's fast enough for use as main RAM. Flash disks are of course another story but you do appear to be talking about system RAM alan -- Optimists say the glass is half full, Pessimists say the glass is half empty, Developers say wtf is the glass twice as big as it needs to be? Alan McKinnon alan at linuxholdings dot co dot za +27 82, double three seven, one nine three five -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list