71. Cars do not use that many memory chips and Toyota already has an affiliate, Nippondenso Co., that makes chips for automobiles. 72. Castro is bullish on the Atmel Corp., a San Jose, Calif., maker of high-performance memory chips. 73. Charges too small for you to feel can scramble the brains of your computer and destroy its memory chips. 74. Chief Financial Officer Andy Bryant said the market is experiencing a glut of flash memory chips for phones. 75. Computer makers, burdened with too much inventory, ordered fewer memory chips than expected. 76. Computer-makers can do this because they keep getting better and cheaper microprocessors and memory chips and keep cutting away at their own costs. 77. Computer manufacturers are now buying fewer memory chips and microprocessors, waiting for prices to fall. 78. Computer users know they can get a big boost in performance by adding some more memory chips. 79. Contracts for memory chips are negotiated by suppliers and users over short periods of time, typically monthly or quarterly. 80. Dallas-based Texas Instruments is the biggest U.S. maker of memory chips, the electronic components that store data for computers. |