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CMOS Stocks List

CMOS Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Jul 1 ON ON Semiconductor in spotlight as Wells Fargo adds to Q3 Tactical Idea list
Jul 1 MU Jim Cramer On Micron Technology Inc (NASDAQ:MU): “It’s Not Done Going Up”
Jul 1 MU Micron's Earnings Highlight Its Overvalued Nature
Jul 1 ON Zacks Investment Ideas feature highlights: Lululemon, Nike, Ulta Beauty and ON Semiconductor
Jul 1 MU Nvidia Among Biggest Stock Market Winners In 2024, But This Is No. 1
Jul 1 MU Micron Q3: Good Quarter, Bad Cash-Flow (Rating Downgrade)
Jul 1 MU Micron Technology: The Stock Trading At 14.7x P/E In 2025 Is A Buy (Rating Upgrade)
Jun 30 MU Moderna And Walgreens Boots Alliance Were Among The 10 Biggest Large Cap Losers Last Week (June 23 - June 29): Are These In Your Portfolio?
Jun 30 MU Micron: Short Term Sell Signal, But Long Term Buy Signal (Technical Analysis)
Jun 30 MU Micron: The Meltdown Is Not Over - Still Expensive Here
Jun 30 MU Micron: Key Beneficiary Of AI But Too Richly Valued
Jun 30 MU Micron Technology Third Quarter 2024 Earnings: Beats Expectations
Jun 30 MU Why Nvidia stock is now in treacherous waters: Morning Brief
Jun 30 MU Forget Nvidia: Here's Another Spectacular Semiconductor Stock to Buy Right Now, According to Wall Street
Jun 29 MU Notable analyst calls this week: Nike, Micron and FedEx among top picks
Jun 29 MU Trending stocks of the week: MU, DJT, RIVN, AMZN and more
Jun 29 MU Micron: Don't Ignore The History Of Memory Cyclicality
Jun 28 MU Top Stock Reports for Mastercard, Micron Technology & Citigroup
Jun 28 MU Micron Q3 2024 Earnings: Brace For More Turbulence Ahead
Jun 28 MU Stock Market Rally Powers To Fresh Highs; Carnival, Micron, Nike In Focus: Weekly Review
CMOS

Complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) is a technology for constructing integrated circuits. CMOS technology is used in microprocessors, microcontrollers, static RAM, and other digital logic circuits. CMOS technology is also used for several analog circuits such as image sensors (CMOS sensor), data converters, and highly integrated transceivers for many types of communication. Frank Wanlass patented CMOS in 1963 (US patent 3,356,858) while working for Fairchild Semiconductor.
CMOS is also sometimes referred to as complementary-symmetry metal–oxide–semiconductor (COS-MOS).
The words "complementary-symmetry" refer to the typical design style with CMOS using complementary and symmetrical pairs of p-type and n-type metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistors (MOSFETs) for logic functions.Two important characteristics of CMOS devices are high noise immunity and low static power consumption.
Since one transistor of the pair is always off, the series combination draws significant power only momentarily during switching between on and off states. Consequently, CMOS devices do not produce as much waste heat as other forms of logic, for example transistor–transistor logic (TTL) or N-type metal-oxide-semiconductor logic (NMOS) logic, which normally have some standing current even when not changing state. CMOS also allows a high density of logic functions on a chip. It was primarily for this reason that CMOS became the most used technology to be implemented in very-large-scale integration (VLSI) chips.
The phrase "metal–oxide–semiconductor" is a reference to the physical structure of certain field-effect transistors, having a metal gate electrode placed on top of an oxide insulator, which in turn is on top of a semiconductor material. Aluminium was once used but now the material is polysilicon. Other metal gates have made a comeback with the advent of high-κ dielectric materials in the CMOS process, as announced by IBM and Intel for the 45 nanometer node and smaller sizes.

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