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<p>bus cycles. This was a radical advance, effectively halving the number of address lines required, which enabled it to fit into packages with fewer pins, a cost advantage that grew with every jump in memory size. The MK4096 proved to be a very robust design for customer applications. At the 16&nbsp;Kbit density, the cost advantage increased; the 16&nbsp;Kbit Mostek MK4116 DRAM, introduced in 1976, achieved greater than 75% worldwide DRAM market share. However, as density increased to 64&nbsp;Kbit in the early 1980s, Mostek and other US manufacturers</p><p>
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