logo
PGT Introduces New Panel Sizes for Popular Preferred View Sliding Glass Door

PGT Introduces New Panel Sizes for Popular Preferred View Sliding Glass Door

Business Wirea day ago
VENICE, Fla.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--PGT Custom Windows and Doors, part of the MITER Brands portfolio and America's authority in high-performance windows and doors, announced today the launch of larger panel sizes for its WinGuard ® Aluminum Preferred View Sliding Glass Door (SGD770NS).
"True to its name, the Preferred View Sliding Glass Door delivers wide-open views and natural light like never before,' said Brian Covey, Vice President of Sales, MITER Brands-South.
The Preferred View Sliding Glass Door now offers door panels with up to 60 square feet of glass in sizes as large as 6' wide x 10' tall or 5' wide x 12' tall. These expanded dimensions are available in a variety of operating configurations depending on panel height. All sizes up to 12' tall are offered in bypass and pocket configurations, while 90-degree or 135-degree corner configurations are available for doors with panels up to 10' in height.
'Over the past decade, we've seen consistent demand for more glass and less frame,' said Brian Covey, Vice President of Sales, MITER Brands-South. 'This latest enhancement gives homeowners the expansive sizes and minimal sightlines they're looking for. True to its name, the Preferred View Sliding Glass Door delivers wide-open views and natural light like never before.'
Since its launch in 2023, the Preferred View Sliding Glass Door has become a favorite among homeowners and builders for its narrow 2.5' interlocks—half the width of standard designs—and its ability to scale up to 8 panels wide. Now capable of creating openings up to 48 feet wide, the door offers a striking way to maximize views, integrate indoor and outdoor spaces seamlessly, and develop a sense of openness in any room.
Part of PGT's WinGuard Aluminum impact-resistant door series, the Preferred View Sliding Glass Door features a robust aluminum frame engineered for durability, long-lasting strength, and performance. The door is also equipped with heavy-duty tandem rollers for smooth, fingertip opening. At the same time, a dual-point locking mechanism enhances security by preventing the panels from being lifted off the tracks.
With the addition of larger panel sizes for the Preferred View Sliding Glass Door, PGT continues to push the boundaries of innovation and design, offering homeowners bold new ways to customize their living spaces with the sleek and modern aesthetics they desire.
Learn more about PGT at www.pgtwindows.com.
ABOUT PGT CUSTOM WINDOWS AND DOORS
PGT Custom Windows and Doors, part of the MITER Brands portfolio, is America's authority in high-performance windows and doors. With decades of proven industry leadership and over 8+ million units installed, PGT Custom Windows and Doors has a consistent track record of leading the space with an unwavering focus on safety and innovation. Its product lines include WinGuard ® aluminum and vinyl frames for impact resistant windows, ClassicVue Max™ aluminum frames for non-impact windows, and EnergyVue ® vinyl frames for non-impact windows.
PGT Custom Windows and Doors has a primary focus of protecting families' lifestyle choices with a commitment of delivering industry-best service. Backed by innovative technology, homeowners can enjoy their home life with greater peace of mind, wherever they choose to live, knowing they are protected from storms, noise, and intrusion. For more information, visit PGTWindows.com.
About MITER Brands
Founded in 1947, MITER Brands is a residential window and door manufacturer that produces a portfolio of window and door brands for the new construction and replacement segments with an owner-operated, family-first approach. With more than 20 manufacturing facilities throughout the United States, MITER Brands is a nationwide supplier of precision-built and energy-efficient products. Through optimized manufacturing, valued relationships, and dedicated team members coast to coast, MITER Brands instills confidence and drives quality customer experiences. The name 'MITER' is an acronym reflecting five of our core strengths: Manufacturing, Innovation, Trust, Experiences, and Relationships. For more information, visit www.miterbrands.com.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

CFP Board Promotes Public Trust With 11 Actions
CFP Board Promotes Public Trust With 11 Actions

Business Wire

time2 hours ago

  • Business Wire

CFP Board Promotes Public Trust With 11 Actions

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards, Inc. (CFP Board), a nonprofit organization with more than 100,000 CFP® professionals, today announced actions taken to uphold its ethical standards, imposing sanctions on 11 individuals. CFP Board is a professional body that has adopted a Code of Ethics and Standards of Conduct (Code and Standards) that benefits and protects the public and advances financial planning as a distinct and valuable profession. The Code and Standards requires that a CFP® professional meet certain duties when providing professional services to a client, and to refrain from engaging in other misconduct that reflects adversely on their integrity or fitness as a certificant, on the CFP® marks or on the profession. CFP® professionals make a commitment to CFP Board to abide by the Code and Standards, and their compliance reinforces the integrity of the CFP Board certification marks. CFP Board does not guarantee a CFP® professional's services, but it may sanction a CFP® professional who fails to uphold their commitment. Information about how CFP Board addresses ethical issues involving CFP® professionals and those pursuing initial CFP® certification is available at At the public can verify an individual's CFP® certification status. CFP Board also provides links to other sources of information about CFP® professionals that may be more recent or that may contain information that has not led to CFP Board discipline and does not appear on CFP Board's website, such as the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority's (FINRA's) BrokerCheck and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC's) Investment Adviser Public Disclosure databases for individuals who are subject to FINRA or SEC oversight. CFP Board is not a federal, state or self-regulatory organization, and it does not sanction financial services firms. The Public Sanctions on 11 Individuals STATE NAME LOCATION SANCTION Maryland Gordon S. Wallace, CFP® Annapolis Public Censure Florida Mark Monkarsh Tampa Suspension Illinois Robert D. Lyman Barrington Suspension Kentucky Michael H. Gross Louisville Suspension New Jersey Danny Z. Spiegel Ocean Suspension Oregon Timothy D. Clairmont Portland Suspension Texas Todd L. Luft The Woodlands Suspension California Brian P. Colla Corona Temporary Bar Florida Christopher A. Hynes Punta Gorda Temporary Bar North Carolina Basil Marchi Raleigh Temporary Bar Pennsylvania John A. Dougherty Blue Bell Revocation Expand PUBLIC CENSURE MARYLAND Gordon S. Wallace, CFP® (Annapolis, Maryland): In December 2024, the Disciplinary and Ethics Commission (Commission) issued an order imposing a public censure on Mr. Wallace for violating CFP Board's Code and Standards. The order cites a March 2023 Letter of Acceptance, Waiver and Consent (AWC) that Mr. Wallace entered with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc. (FINRA) in which he consented to a 10-day suspension and a $5,000 fine for violating FINRA Rule 2010, which requires registered persons, in the conduct of their business, to observe high standards of commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade. In the AWC, Mr. Wallace consented to findings that in late May 2021, he and others, at his direction, photographed electronic account information for approximately 135 customers in anticipation of joining another firm. The AWC states that Mr. Wallace retained the information — including customer names, birth dates, account numbers and Social Security numbers—until his new firm secured and returned the information unused. The former firm named Mr. Wallace and others in an arbitration that he resolved in a confidential settlement. The Commission found that Mr. Wallace violated Standards A.8.a, A.9.c and D.2.a of the Code and Standards, which state that a CFP® professional must comply with the laws, rules and regulations governing professional services; must take reasonable steps to protect the security of non-public personal information about any client; and will be subject to discipline by CFP Board for violating policies and procedures of the CFP® professional's firm. The Commission's order was effective January 20, 2025. Read the order: Case History 44120. SUSPENSION FLORIDA Mark Monkarsh (Tampa, Florida): In May 2023, CFP Board's Appeals Commission issued an order suspending Mr. Monkarsh's right to use the CFP Board certification marks for one year and one day based on his violation of Rule 6.5 of CFP Board's Rules of Conduct. The order affirmed a November 2022 decision by CFP Board's Disciplinary and Ethics Commission finding that Mr. Monkarsh had engaged in conduct reflecting adversely on their integrity or fitness as a certificant, on the CFP® marks or on the profession when he failed to pay or file timely returns for federal taxes he owed from 2011 to 2017. The November 2022 decision cites four federal tax liens totaling more than $577,000 issued against Mr. Monkarsh, who owed more than $1.13 million to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), including accrued interest and penalties. In its decision, the Appeals Commission found that the Disciplinary and Ethics Commission did not abuse its discretion when it deviated upward from the applicable sanction in the Sanction Guidelines (public censure) but did abuse its discretion by imposing a three-year suspension on Mr. Monkarsh. Mr. Monkarsh's suspension was effective from April 17, 2024, through April 17, 2025. Read the order: Case History 33150. ILLINOIS Robert D. Lyman (Barrington, Illinois): In May 2025, counsel to the Disciplinary and Ethics Commission (Commission) issued an order suspending Mr. Lyman's CFP® certification after he failed to meet the terms of a consent order approved by the Commission in April 2022. The consent order settled a CFP Board complaint filed against Mr. Lyman involving $644,000 in tax liens the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) imposed on him for failing to pay federal income taxes over several years. CFP Board alleged that the liens demonstrated Mr. Lyman's inability to manage his personal finances and violated Rule 6.5 of CFP Board's Rules of Conduct, which prohibits a CFP® professional from engaging in conduct that reflects adversely on their integrity or fitness as a certificant, on the CFP® marks or on the profession. Mr. Lyman agreed in the consent order that he would certify annually to CFP Board that he was not the subject of any new tax liens but was unable to do so after the IRS and state tax authorities imposed approximately $280,000 in new tax liens against him starting later in 2022. His failure to comply with the terms of the consent order is considered a default under Article 4.1 of CFP Board's Procedural Rules. Based on a determination of the seriousness, scope and harmfulness of Mr. Lyman's conduct, enforcement counsel filed a motion for an administrative order of suspension, which counsel to the Commission granted on May 1, 2025. The suspension is effective from June 2, 2025, until Mr. Lyman is deemed eligible for reinstatement under Article 4.6 of the Procedural Rules. Read the order: Case History 44766. KENTUCKY Michael H. Gross (Louisville, Kentucky): In May 2025, the Disciplinary and Ethics Commission (Commission) issued an order suspending Mr. Gross's CFP® certification and right to use the CFP® marks for three months. The Commission's order cites a February 2023 agreement Mr. Gross entered with Kentucky state regulators requiring him and his advisory firm to pay a $7,400 fine and to remediate deficiencies observed during a routine compliance examination. The Kentucky order describes several books and records violations and a breach of fiduciary duty under the Kentucky securities laws based on findings that Mr. Gross's firm made impermissible guarantees to existing and potential clients on its YouTube channel, charged a client an unreasonable advisory fee on assets held solely in cash, failed to maintain executed advisory contracts, and did not file timely and accurate Forms U4 and ADV. In its order, the Commission found that Mr. Gross violated Standard A.1 of CFP Board's Code and Standards, requiring a CFP® professional to act as a fiduciary and in the best interests of the client at all times when providing financial advice; Standard A.2.b, prohibiting a CFP® professional from making any untrue or misleading statement of a material fact when providing professional services; and Standard A.8.a, requiring a CFP® professional's compliance with all laws, rules and regulations governing professional services. Mr. Gross's suspension is effective from June 9, 2025, through September 8, 2025. Read the order: Case History 45294. NEW JERSEY Danny Z. Spiegel (Ocean, New Jersey): In May 2025, a hearing panel of the Disciplinary and Ethics Commission (Commission) found it in the public interest to impose on Mr. Spiegel an interim suspension of his CFP® certification and right to use the CFP® marks during the pendency of related enforcement proceedings. In its petition for the interim suspension, CFP Board's enforcement counsel cited a January 2025 cease-and-desist order entered by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) against Mr. Spiegel for violating Section 15(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 by selling membership interests in limited liability companies without associating with a registered broker-dealer. The SEC's order, entered with Mr. Spiegel's consent, imposed on him a six-month suspension from associating with any broker, dealer, investment adviser, municipal securities dealer, municipal advisor, transfer agent or nationally recognized statistical rating organization; a six-month suspension from participating in any offering of a penny stock; disgorgement of $142,083; and a civil penalty of $40,000. The CFP Board suspension was effective on May 12, 2025. Read the order: Case History 47584. OREGON Timothy D. Clairmont (Portland, Oregon): In June 2024, CFP Board's Appeals Commission affirmed a December 2023 decision by the Disciplinary and Ethics Commission (Commission) suspending Mr. Clairmont's right to use the CFP® certification marks for two and a half years. In its 2023 order, the Commission found that Mr. Clairmont breached his fiduciary duty under Rule 1.4 of CFP Board's Rules of Conduct and failed to exercise reasonable and prudent professional judgment under Rule 4.4 when he failed to plan for the significant taxes his client incurred on the sale of assets the client had inherited, instead recommending that the client purchase illiquid investments. As a fiduciary providing financial planning, Mr. Clairmont had an obligation to comply with Practice Standard 400-2 of CFP Board's Financial Planning Practice Standards, which requires a CFP® professional to develop recommendations to reasonably meet the client's goals, needs and priorities. The Commission found that Mr. Clairmont failed to fully investigate and set aside funds for his client's tax liability and to appropriately determine the client's required cash flow in relation to her need for immediate income. The Commission also found that Mr. Clairmont violated Rule 6.2 of the Rules of Conduct when he intentionally made a misstatement to CFP Board on his April 2020 Ethics Declaration by answering 'No' to a question asking if he had ever been named a respondent in an arbitration. The order notes that six months earlier, Mr. Clairmont had settled an arbitration claim filed against him by the same client. Mr. Clairmont's suspension is effective June 4, 2025, through December 3, 2027. Read the order: Case History 33677. TEXAS Todd L. Luft (The Woodlands, Texas): In April 2025, counsel to the Disciplinary and Ethics Commission issued an order immediately suspending Mr. Luft's CFP® certification and right to use the CFP® marks based on his February 2025 suspension by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc. (FINRA). FINRA suspended Mr. Luft from associating with any FINRA member after he failed to comply with an arbitration award directing him to pay more than $500,000 to his former firm for not meeting obligations under promissory notes he had signed. The CFP Board order, effective April 21, 2025, suspends Mr. Luft during the pendency of related enforcement proceedings. Read the order: Case History 47717. TEMPORARY BAR CALIFORNIA Brian P. Colla (Corona, California): In May 2025, the Disciplinary and Ethics Commission (Commission) issued an order denying Mr. Colla's petition for a determination that he is fit for CFP® certification and barring him from applying for CFP® certification for two years. Mr. Colla was required to file his petition after disclosing to CFP Board that he had filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protections in October 2001 and again in April 2024. In reaching its determination, the Commission noted that although Mr. Colla's first bankruptcy occurred over 20 years before he entered the financial services industry, his most recent bankruptcy was discharged only one month before he filed his petition. While the second bankruptcy was due in part to unforeseen business challenges arising from the COVID pandemic, the Commission found it too soon to conclude that Mr. Colla had adequately demonstrated an ability to manage his financial affairs. The bar is effective from June 20, 2025, through June 19, 2027. Read the order: Case History 46512. FLORIDA Christopher A. Hynes (Punta Gorda, Florida): In April 2025, Mr. Hynes entered into a consent order with the Disciplinary and Ethics Commission (Commission) barring him from CFP Board certification and the right to use the CFP Board certification marks for one year and a day. The order describes a recommendation Mr. Hynes made to his clients, a Massachusetts couple, to invest in 'structured cash flows' offered by an issuer purporting to sell the rights to pension payments owed to federal employees. The couple, who in February 2016 purchased approximately $87,000 of the structured products, had discussed with Mr. Hynes their need for a stream of cash flow to cover the first phase of their retirement. Mr. Hynes, a lawyer, told the couple that he had conducted extensive due diligence into the issuer of the structured cash flow product he was recommending, including his review of a memorandum discussing the propriety of the issuer's purchase of pension payments under federal law. The clients' purchase agreement for the product states that payments were in fact illiquid and not guaranteed, and that they were subject to 'unsettled' law and increasing scrutiny by state regulators. In 2018, the clients stopped receiving monthly payments, and the issuer was later determined to have orchestrated a Ponzi scheme. In 2022, Massachusetts securities regulators investigated the circumstances around the clients' investment and entered a consent order with Mr. Hynes in which he agreed that he had violated state law by transacting business in the state without being properly registered. Massachusetts barred Mr. Hynes from seeking registration in the state for five years and ordered him to pay approximately $50,000 in restitution, a $25,000 fine and disgorgement of the referral fee he had earned on the transaction. Mr. Hynes's consent order with the Commission cites several violations of CFP Board's Rules of Conduct, including Rule 1.4, for failing to meet his fiduciary duty of care when engaging in financial planning; Rule 4.5, for recommending an investment that was not suitable for his clients; Rule 4.3, for failing to comply with applicable regulatory requirements governing the professional services he provided to his clients; and Rule 6.5, for engaging in conduct that reflects adversely on his integrity or fitness as a certificant, on the CFP® marks or on the profession. The bar is effective from April 30, 2025, through April 30, 2026. Read the order: Case History 45210. NORTH CAROLINA Basil Marchi (Raleigh, North Carolina): In May 2025, the Disciplinary and Ethics Commission (Commission) issued an order denying Mr. Marchi's petition for a determination that he is fit for CFP® certification and barring him from applying for certification for three years. In his May 2024 application for CFP® certification, Mr. Marchi disclosed tax liens and other conduct presumed to bar him from being certified. In February 2016, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) began imposing liens on Mr. Marchi covering multiple tax years dating back to 2005. In all, the IRS imposed more than $900,000 in liens for unpaid federal taxes, fines, penalties and fees. North Carolina tax authorities filed separate liens related to Mr. Marchi's unpaid state taxes. His firm terminated him in August 2016 for failing to report the liens, and in March 2017, Mr. Marchi entered a Letter of Acceptance, Waiver and Consent with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc. (FINRA) suspending him for six months and fining him $10,000 for failing to disclose the liens on his FINRA registration. Mr. Marchi filed for bankruptcy in early 2018. At the time of his hearing, Mr. Marchi had not paid his FINRA fine and had $50,000 in outstanding federal tax liens, which he intended to pay under an installment plan with the IRS. In addition to imposing a three-year bar, the Commission's order conditions Mr. Marchi's eligibility for CFP® certification on his having satisfied all outstanding liens and paid his FINRA fine. Mr. Marchi's bar is effective from June 2, 2025, through June 1, 2028. Read the order: Case History 46708. REVOCATION PENNSYLVANIA John A. Dougherty (Blue Bell, Pennsylvania): In May 2025, counsel to the Disciplinary and Ethics Commission (Commission) issued an administrative order revoking Mr. Dougherty's CFP® certification and permanently barring him from future certification after he indicated he would no longer participate in CFP Board's investigation into allegations made against him in a lawsuit filed in South Carolina state court. The lawsuit alleged that Mr. Dougherty breached his fiduciary duty and duty of care and failed to properly disclose conflicts of interest relating to investment recommendations he had made to a client, including that the client invest in a highly speculative business venture. Mr. Dougherty was already under an interim suspension issued in April 2024. By expressing his clear intention not to participate in CFP Board's investigation, Mr. Dougherty was in default under Article 4.1.b of its Procedural Rules. Enforcement counsel filed a motion for an administrative order revoking Mr. Dougherty's CFP® certification and permanently barring his future certification based on a determination of the seriousness, scope and harmfulness of his conduct. Counsel for the Commission granted the motion on May 30, 2025. The order was effective on June 30, 2025. Read the order: Case History 46471. ABOUT CFP BOARD CFP Board is the professional body for personal financial planners in the U.S. CFP Board consists of two affiliated organizations focused on advancing the financial planning profession for the public's benefit. CFP Board of Standards sets and upholds standards for financial planning and administers the prestigious CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER® certification — widely recognized by the public, advisors and firms as the standard for financial planners — so that the public has access to the benefits of competent and ethical financial planning. CFP® certification is held by more than 100,000 people in the U.S. CFP Board Center for Financial Planning addresses diversity and workforce development challenges and conducts and publishes research that adds to the financial planning profession's body of knowledge.

Theraclion Growth Up in S1 2025
Theraclion Growth Up in S1 2025

Business Wire

time4 hours ago

  • Business Wire

Theraclion Growth Up in S1 2025

MALAKOFF, France--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Regulatory News: THERACLION (ISIN: FR0010120402; Mnemo: ALTHE), an innovative company developing Sonovein®, a robotic platform for non-invasive High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound (HIFU) varicose vein treatment, reviews its business for S1 2025. Sales of consumables (recurring revenue) up 30% compared to 2024 New treatment centers opened in Bulgaria and Spain Appointment of a new business manager and acceleration of commercial activities On-schedule completion of the follow-up period for the pivotal FDA clinical trial Martin Deterre, CEO of Theraclion, states: "In early 2025, Theraclion stepped up Sonovein's activity. In June, the final 12-month follow-ups for patients in the pivotal FDA-approved clinical trial were completed on-schedule. We are now awaiting the final results, which we expect to publish in September. Theraclion has also entered a business development phase: building a sales and marketing team, opening two new Sonovein treatment centers, and achieving significant growth in recurring revenue — all of which promise the achievement of our ambitious goals." Commercial activity acceleration As part of its business development, Theraclion is actively building its sales and marketing team. In May 2025, Thibault Le Normand joined the company as Chief Business Officer to boost sales in the Middle East and product placements (PPUs) of Sonovein in Europe. With over a decade of experience in international development of medical devices, Thibault Le Normand brings valuable expertise to this strategic growth phase. At the same time, the technological credibility and clinical maturity of Sonovein have been further demonstrated by the publication of new scientific articles as well as by over a dozen presentations at major international congresses by renowned physicians using the device. Sonovein's international profile has also increased through Theraclion's participation in congresses, such as Vein in Venice (April, Venice), Venous Symposium (May, New York), and the European Venous Forum (June, Krakow). This outreach effort was supported by the launch of a new product identity and a new website, giving Sonovein a new brand image that reflects innovation, clinical excellence, and ambition. In addition, two new product placement (PPU) contracts for Sonovein have been signed in Bulgaria and Spain, stepping up Theraclion's presence in Europe and expanding the installed base of the technology. Revenue for S1 2025 Theraclion's revenue for S1 2025 was €835K, up 89% compared to 2024 (€442K) (prior to the non-recurring adjustment of €680K related to the cancellation of Echopulse system sales in 2024). Consumables, which include recurring revenues from PPUs, was up 30% compared to S1 2024. Service revenues were up 232% over the same period. This strong momentum is a key indicator of increasing use of Sonovein by treatment centers and reflects the technology's sustained traction in the field. Combined, consumables and services — representing recurring revenue — was up 57% compared to 2024. Progress of the pivotal FDA clinical trial In the USA, the pivotal FDA-approved study for SONOVEIN® reached a major milestone in June 2025 with the on-schedule completion of the 12-month post-treatment patient follow-ups. Data analysis is currently underway, with results expected in September. Submission of the marketing authorization application to the FDA is planned for Fall 2025, with potential approval estimated for Q2 2026, subject to the FDA's processing time. This progress marks a critical strategic milestone in the work to access the world's largest market for venous disease treatment. Next financial publication: Theraclion will publish its interim financial results on October 29, 2025. About Theraclion Theraclion is a French MedTech company committed to developing a non-invasive alternative to surgery through the innovative use of focused ultrasound. High Intensity Focused Ultrasound (HIFU) does not require incisions or an operating room, leaves no scars, and patients can immediately resume their routines. HIFU treatment concentrates therapeutic ultrasounds on an internal focal point from outside the body. Theraclion is developing SONOVEIN®, a CE-marked, a robotic platform for HIFU varicose vein treatment, which could replace millions of surgical procedures every year. In the USA, SONOVEIN® is an investigational device limited to investigational use; it is not available for sale in the USA. Based in Malakoff (Paris), the Theraclion team comprises some 30 people, most of them involved in technological and clinical development. Theraclion is listed on Euronext Growth Paris Eligible for the PEA-PME scheme Mnemonic: ALTHE - ISIN code: FR0010120402 LEI: 9695007X7HA7A1GCYD29

Sandisk Forms HBF™ Technical Advisory Board to Guide Development and Strategy for High-Bandwidth Flash Memory Technology
Sandisk Forms HBF™ Technical Advisory Board to Guide Development and Strategy for High-Bandwidth Flash Memory Technology

Business Wire

time4 hours ago

  • Business Wire

Sandisk Forms HBF™ Technical Advisory Board to Guide Development and Strategy for High-Bandwidth Flash Memory Technology

MILPITAS, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sandisk Corporation (NASDAQ: SNDK) today announced the formation of a Technical Advisory Board to guide the development and strategy of its groundbreaking High Bandwidth Flash (HBF™) memory technology. The board includes industry experts and senior technical leaders from both within and outside the company. Appointed today, Professor David Patterson and Raja Koduri will provide strategic guidance, technical insight, market perspective, and shape open standards as Sandisk prepares to launch HBF. 'We're honored to have two distinguished computer architecture experts join our Technical Advisory Board,' said Alper Ilkbahar, Executive Vice President, Chief Technology Officer, and HBF Technical Advisory Board member at Sandisk. 'Their collective experience and strategic counsel will be instrumental in shaping HBF as the future memory standard for the AI industry, and affirming we not only meet but exceed the expectations of our customers and partners.' Professor David Patterson, Pardee Professor of Computer Science, Emeritus at the University of California at Berkeley and a Google distinguished engineer, will lead the Technical Advisory Board and guide the group toward actionable insights and decisions. He is a prominent computer scientist known for co-developing Reduced Instruction Set Computing (RISC), which revolutionized processor design. He played key roles in the development of Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks (RAID), and Networks of Workstations (NOW). Patterson co-authored the seminal textbook Computer Architecture: A Quantitative Approach and was also awarded the 2017 ACM Turing Award for his contributions to the industry. 'HBF shows the promise of playing an important role in datacenter AI by delivering unprecedented memory capacity at high bandwidth, enabling inference workloads to scale far beyond today's constraints,' said Professor Patterson. 'It could drive down costs of new AI applications that are currently unaffordable.' Raja Koduri is a computer engineer and business executive renowned for leading graphics architecture, with previous positions at AMD as Senior Vice President and Chief Architect and at Intel as Executive Vice President of Accelerated Computing Systems and Graphics. He directed the development of AMD's Polaris, Vega, and Navi GPU architectures, Intel's Arc and Ponte Vecchio GPUs, and spearheaded Intel's foray into discrete graphics. In early 2023, he founded a startup focused on generative AI for gaming, media, and entertainment, and joined the Board of Tenstorrent in the AI and RISC‑V semiconductor space. Most recently, he serves as Founder/CEO of Oxmiq Labs and Co-Founder of Mihira Visual Studios and continues to shape graphics and AI innovation through advisory and board roles across the semiconductor industry. 'HBF is set to revolutionize edge AI by equipping devices with memory capacity and bandwidth capabilities that will support sophisticated models running locally in real time,' said Koduri. 'This advancement will unlock a new era of intelligent edge applications, fundamentally changing how and where AI inference is performed.' Introduced at Future FWD: Sandisk 2025 Investor Day, HBF is a breakthrough memory solution designed to augment High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) for AI inference workloads, offering comparable bandwidth while delivering up to 8x the capacity at a similar cost. Enabled by BiCS technology and CBA wafer bonding, HBF leverages proprietary stacking with ultra-low die warpage for 16-high configurations. Its architecture has been developed over the past year with input from leading AI industry players. For more information about HBF, please visit this Fact Sheet. About Sandisk Sandisk (Nasdaq: SNDK) delivers innovative Flash solutions and advanced memory technologies that meet people and businesses at the intersection of their aspirations and the moment, enabling them to keep moving and pushing possibility forward. Follow Sandisk on Instagram, Facebook, X, LinkedIn, and YouTube. Join TeamSandisk on Instagram. Sandisk and the Sandisk logo are registered trademarks or trademarks of Sandisk Corporation or its affiliates in the U.S. and/or other countries. All other marks are the property of their respective owners. Product specifications subject to change without notice. © 2025 Sandisk Corporation or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store