Lexar is a brand of flash memoryproducts manufactured by the Chinese company Longsys. Lexar was founded as an Americanmanufacturer of digital media products based in San Jose, California. Products manufactured by Lexar include SD cards, CompactFlash cards, USB flash drives, card readers and Solid State Drives. Once a division of Cirrus Logic, Lexar leveraged its parent company's experience in building ATA controllers in developing its own flash controllers. Lexar was spun off from Cirrus Logic in 1996. Lexar was created by Petro Estakhri and Mike Assar. In 2005, Lexar was awarded $380 million in a lawsuit against Toshiba who copied Lexar's flash memory technology. Lexar was acquired by Micron Technology in 2006, and subsequently merged with Crucial Technology under the name Lexar Media, a subsidiary of Micron. In September 2007, Lexar extended its agreement with Eastman Kodak Company to develop and market Kodak-branded flash memory products worldwide. The Lexar JumpDrive trademark was often used synonymously with the term USB flash drives when the technology was first adopted. On June 26, 2017, Micron announced it was to discontinue the Lexar retail removable media storage business and put part or all of the business up for sale. On August 31, 2017, Lexar was acquired by Longsys, a Shenzhen, China-based flash memory company. In 2018, Lexar reentered the flash storage market. In January 2019, the company unveiled the first SD card with a storage capacity of 1 terabyte. In December 2019, Lexar demonstrated a prototype 7.5GB/sec PCIe 4.0 SSD which is set to be the world's fastest consumer SSD. In April 2020, Lexar released its world's smallest memory card featuring Xtacking tech from Yangtze Memory Technology. In June 2020, Lexar announced its entry to the DRAM market by unveiling 7 different DDR4-2666 memory kits for mainstream laptops and desktops. Lexar also plans to release faster, 3000MHz and 3200MHz memory kits in the future, along with kits "with heatsinks and RGB lighting", targeting gamers and enthusiasts.