Innodisk says flash price surge accelerates in 4Q25

As the global memory shortage intensifies, Innodisk chairman Randy Chien stated that the trend for 2026 will be simultaneous shortages in DRAM and NAND Flash, while edge AI applications take off. With AI-related products accounting for 25% of Innodisk’s revenue in 2025, the company expects to increase the share to 30% in 2026. DDR4 will remain a key product for industrial applications over the next two to three years.

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Commentary: When CXMT stops following and starts defining the PC-server memory race

The global memory market is once again nearing an inflection point. With AI workloads spreading across end devices, DRAM has turned into the central bottleneck dictating shipment rhythms for PCs, servers, and AI PCs. Korean suppliers continue to curb production and keep the market tight, prompting rising expectations for new, credible sources of supply.

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AOC Q27G4SP is here with a 320Hz QHD Fast IPS display

The AOC Q27G4SP is a 27-inch widescreen gaming monitor designed to deliver uncompromising performance and immersive visuals. Built on Fast IPS technology, the panel ensures wide viewing angles and lightning-fast response times, with 0.3 ms MPRT and 1 ms GtG, paired with a maximum resolution of 2560 x 1440 at a 320 Hz refresh rate via HDMI 2.1 and DisplayPort 1.4 with DSC. This combination ensures…

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Zhong Yang’s 2026 growth driven by automotive, drone, and AR

At Zhong Yang Technology’s investor conference on November 21, 2025, General Manager Chih-Cheng Hsu stated that after undergoing significant adjustments over the past two to three years and improving its business structure, the company began seeing results in 2025. Structural growth is expected in 2026, and Zhong Yang is optimistic about automotive, drones, and AR as its most growth-oriented businesses. Additionally, its Thailand plant is expected to start contributing more revenue in 2026.

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US to ease BVLOS drone regulations, fueling commercial drone growth

The US government is preparing to ease restrictions on beyond-visual-line-of-sight drone operations, a regulatory shift that could unlock large-scale commercial deployments across logistics, inspection, and infrastructure services. The plan would allow drones to fly below 400 feet at approved sites without requiring case-by-case waivers, a move expected to accelerate new business models and attract more companies into critical enabling technologies.

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