Patent Publication Number: US-11650952-B2

Title: Memory pooling between selected memory resources via a base station

Description:
PRIORITY INFORMATION 
     This application is a Continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 16/142,095, filed Sep. 26, 2018, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference. 
    
    
     TECHNICAL FIELD 
     The present disclosure relates generally to semiconductor memory and methods, and more particularly, to apparatuses, systems, and methods for memory pooling between selected memory resources via a base station. 
     BACKGROUND 
     Memory resources are typically provided as internal, semiconductor, integrated circuits in computers or other electronic systems. There are many different types of memory, including volatile and non-volatile memory. Volatile memory can require power to maintain its data (e.g., host data, error data, etc.). Volatile memory can include random access memory (RAM), dynamic random access memory (DRAM), static random access memory (SRAM), synchronous dynamic random access memory (SDRAM), and thyristor random access memory (TRAM), among other types. Non-volatile memory can provide persistent data by retaining stored data when not powered. Non-volatile memory can include NAND flash memory, NOR flash memory, and resistance variable memory, such as phase change random access memory (PCRAM) and resistive random access memory (RRAM), ferroelectric random access memory (FeRAM), and magnetoresistive random access memory (MRAM), such as spin torque transfer random access memory (STT RAM), among other types. 
     Electronic systems often include a number of processing resources (e.g., one or more processors), which may retrieve instructions from a suitable location and execute the instructions and/or store results of the executed instructions to a suitable location (e.g., the memory resources). A processor can include a number of functional units such as arithmetic logic unit (ALU) circuitry, floating point unit (FPU) circuitry, and a combinatorial logic block, for example, which can be used to execute instructions by performing logical operations such as AND, OR, NOT, NAND, NOR, and XOR, and invert (e.g., NOT) logical operations on data (e.g., one or more operands). For example, functional unit circuitry may be used to perform arithmetic operations such as addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division on operands via a number of operations. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
         FIG.  1    is a schematic diagram illustrating an example of a wirelessly utilizable resource that may be utilized for formation of a memory pool between selected memory resources in accordance with a number of embodiments of the present disclosure. 
         FIG.  2    is a block diagram of examples of a system including wirelessly utilizable resources in accordance with a number of embodiments of the present disclosure. 
         FIG.  3    is a block diagram of examples of a network for wirelessly coupling selected wirelessly utilizable resources for formation of a memory pool in accordance with a number of embodiments of the present disclosure. 
         FIG.  4    is a block diagram illustrating an example of environments that correspond to a range of densities of wirelessly utilizable resources couplable for formation of a memory pool in accordance with a number of embodiments of the present disclosure. 
         FIG.  5    is a block diagram illustrating an example of a route for vehicles upon which the resources may be implemented for formation of a memory pool in accordance with a number of embodiments of the present disclosure. 
         FIG.  6    is a schematic diagram illustrating an example of wirelessly utilizable resources selectably coupled to circuitry to enable formation of a memory pool in accordance with a number of embodiments of the present disclosure. 
         FIG.  7    is a block diagram illustrating an example of authorization criteria that may be utilized in authorization of formation of a memory pool in accordance with a number of embodiments of the present disclosure. 
         FIG.  8    is a flow chart illustrating an example of formation of a memory pool between selected wirelessly utilizable memory resources, via a base station, implemented on a corresponding number of vehicles in accordance with a number of embodiments of the present disclosure. 
     
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
     The present disclosure includes systems, apparatuses and methods associated with memory pooling between selected memory resources via a base station. In a number of embodiments, an apparatus includes a memory resource, a processing resource coupled to the memory resource, a transceiver resource coupled to the processing resource, and a base station wirelessly couplable to the transceiver resource. The memory resource, the processing resource, the transceiver resource, and the base station are configured to enable formation of a memory pool between the memory resource and another memory resource responsive to a request to access the other memory resource via a wirelessly coupled base station. 
     A processing resource (e.g., one or more processors, microprocessors, or some other type of controlling circuitry), in combination with a memory resource as described herein, may be operated at a high speed (e.g., at a bandwidth of greater than 10 gigabits per second (GB/s)) for performance of some operations. To contribute to such performance, faster processing resources and/or more memory resources may be combined on a particular computing device. However, the higher the used bandwidth of and/or the more such resources are operating on the computing device, the higher the failure rate (e.g., failures in time (FIT)) and/or the lower the mean time between failures (MTBF) may become. Combining a processing resource with a lower bandwidth and/or a memory resource having less memory capacity (e.g., fewer memory devices, banks, arrays, etc.) on such computing devices may comparatively reduce the failure rate. 
     However, performance of particular functions (e.g., functionalities that are programmed and/or programmable to yield an intended outcome and/or a number of operations that are performed as sub-portions of the functionality) may rely on an ability of a processing resource, in combination with a memory resource, to operate at a bandwidth high enough to possibly result in a high FIT and/or a low MTBF. Such functions may include autonomous functions, which may, for example, use machine learning and/or artificial intelligence to perceive an environment and adjust operations accordingly to improve probability of yielding an intended outcome of a particular functionality (e.g., without human interaction and/or supervision). 
     Proper performance of the operations contributing to such automated functionalities may be critical for prevention of damage to a product including such automated functionalities (e.g., autonomous vehicles, such as automobiles, trucks, trains, airplanes, rockets, space stations, etc., among many other possibilities) and/or safety of transport of an object (e.g., a human passenger or any other object) being transited via an autonomous vehicle. Hence, automated functionalities utilized in such implementations may benefit from having lower error rates in execution of instructions for performance and/or selection of the operations contributing to the automated functionalities (e.g., relative to higher error rates considered acceptable for other utilities, such as cellular telephones, smart phones, personal computers, etc.). 
     Two ways to affect bandwidth are to adjust a bit width (e.g., a number of channels) on a bus for input and output (I/O) of data and to adjust a speed for I/O of data by a processor. For example, an implementation of a processor (e.g., a processing resource) having a 256 bit interface running at 14 GB/s and coupled to 8 DRAM devices, including one or more banks, (e.g., a memory resource) may have a high bandwidth of 448 GB/s, which may be correlated with a high cost, a high power consumption, a high operating temperature, and/or a short battery life, along with a high FIT rate. An implementation of a processor having a 32 bit interface running at 6 GB/s and coupled to 1 DRAM device may have a lower bandwidth of 25 GB/s, which may be correlated with a lower cost, a lower power consumption, a lower operating temperature, and/or a longer battery life, along with a lower FIT rate. However, reduction of the bandwidth of the processing resources and/or the number of memory resources combined on a particular computing device may be in conflict with meeting intended performance levels of an automated functionality and/or an implementation including the functionality. 
     In contrast, consistent with a number of embodiments described herein, there may be a plurality (e.g., a network) of memory resources and processing resources (e.g., formed and/or positioned on a corresponding plurality of vehicles) wirelessly connected (e.g., coupled) by a transceiver resource (e.g., a number of radio frequency (RF) transmitter/receivers abbreviated as transceivers) to share data by formation of a memory pool via a base station. Such a memory pool may, for example, include 100 vehicles, where each vehicle may include a 32 bit interface running at 6 GB/s and coupled to 1 DRAM device. The memory pool formed as such may effectively have a 3,200 bit wide bus with a total available bandwidth of around 2600 GB/s. To enable such a bus width and/or bandwidth between separate vehicles, the wireless coupling may be performed using fifth generation (5G) wireless technology, although embodiments are not limited to using 5G technology. The actual size of the memory pool, along with the corresponding bit width and/or bandwidth, would be scalable dependent upon the number of vehicles included in the memory pool, among other considerations described herein. 
     Hence, formation of a memory pool as such may increase a cumulative computation power (e.g., capacity) and/or reliability of the combination of memory resources and processing resources on the plurality of vehicles (e.g., relative to a processing resource operating at a higher bandwidth and coupled to a higher number of memory banks on each of the vehicles). The reduced complexity and/or bandwidth of such a processing resource and memory resource implementation may be associated with lower cost, power consumption, operating temperature, and/or a longer battery life. The reliability may be increased by a reduced FIT rate for each processing resource and/or memory resource on each individual vehicle, by a failed processing resource and/or memory resource not being included in the memory pool in the first place, and/or by a failed processing resource and/or memory resource being replaced by another processing resource and/or memory resource on another vehicle or vehicles. 
     The figures herein follow a numbering convention in which the first digit or digits of a reference number correspond to the figure number and the remaining digits identify an element or component in the figure. Similar elements or components between different figures may be identified by the use of similar digits. For example,  108  may reference element “ 08 ” in  FIG.  1   , and a similar element may be referenced as  608  in  FIG.  6   . 
       FIG.  1    is a schematic diagram illustrating an example of a wirelessly utilizable resource that may be utilized for formation of a memory pool between selected memory resources in accordance with a number of embodiments of the present disclosure. The wirelessly utilizable resource  100  illustrated in  FIG.  1    is intended to represent an embodiment of one implementation of a combination of various resources. The illustrated wirelessly utilizable resource  100  may represent an embodiment of an “apparatus” as described herein, although such apparatuses may include more or fewer elements than shown in  FIG.  1   . The wirelessly utilizable resource  100  also may represent an example of an embodiment of a plurality of such resources (e.g.,  100 - 1 ,  100 - 2 , . . . ,  100 -N), which may be utilizable in combination to enable formation of a memory pool between at least one memory resource and another memory resource, an embodiment of one of which is shown at  101  in  FIG.  1   . For clarity, one memory resource and another memory resource may be distinguished from each other as a first memory resource and a second memory resource denoted respectively by reference numbers  101 - 1  and  101 - 2 . Similarly, one processing resource and another processing resource may be distinguished from each other as a first processing resource and a second processing resource denoted respectively by reference numbers  108 - 1  and  108 - 2 . Other components presented herein may be similarly distinguished. As described herein, embodiments are not limited to two memory resources  101 , processing resources  108 , and corresponding other components being included in a memory pool. 
     A “memory resource” as used herein is a general term intended to at least include memory (e.g., memory cells) arranged, for example, in a number of bank groups, banks, bank sections, subarrays, and/or rows of a number of memory devices. The embodiment of the memory resource  101  illustrated in  FIG.  1    is shown to include, by way of example, a plurality of memory devices  103 - 1 ,  103 - 2 , . . . ,  103 -N. The memory resource  101  may be or may include, in a number of embodiments, a number of volatile memory devices formed and/or operable as RAM, DRAM, SRAM, SDRAM, and/or TRAM, among other types of volatile memory devices. Alternatively or in addition, the memory resource  101  may be or may include, in a number of embodiments, a number of non-volatile memory devices formed and/or operable as NAND, NOR, other Flash memory devices, PCRAM, RRAM, FeRAM, MRAM, STT RAM, phase change memory, and/or 3DXPoint, among other types of non-volatile memory devices. 
     Each memory device  103  may, in a number of embodiments, represent a memory device on which a number of bank groups, banks, bank sections, subarrays, and/or rows are configured (e.g., dedicated and/or programmable) to store data values (e.g., instructions) for performance of a particular functionality. Each functionality may include storage of data values to direct performance of a number of operations that contribute to performance of the functionality. By way of example and not by way of limitation, such functionalities may include steering a vehicle to reach an intended destination, steering the vehicle to avoid obstructions, obeying traffic signals, and/or enabling the formation of a memory pool between the memory resource  101  formed and/or positioned on the vehicle and at least one other memory resource formed and/or positioned on another vehicle, among many other possibilities for functionalities to be stored by the memory devices  103  of the memory resource  101  related to vehicles or other implementations. 
     Each of the plurality of memory devices  103 - 1 ,  103 - 2 , . . . ,  103 -N of the memory resource  101  may be coupled to a corresponding plurality of channels  105 - 1 ,  105 - 2 , . . . ,  105 -N. The plurality of channels  105 - 1 ,  105 - 2 , . . . ,  105 -N are described further in connection with  FIG.  6   . The plurality of channels  105 - 1 ,  105 - 2 , . . . ,  105 -N may be selectably coupled to control circuitry  107  of the memory resource  101 . The control circuitry  107  may be configured to enable data values for and/or instructions (e.g., commands) related to performance of a particular functionality to be directed to an appropriate one or more of the plurality of memory devices  103 - 1 ,  103 - 2 , . . . ,  103 -N. 
     In a number of embodiments, the data values and/or instructions may be provided by (e.g., sent from) a processing resource  108  (e.g., from a controller  110  thereof). The instructions may be sent from the processing resource  108  to the memory resource  101  by the resources being coupled via a bus  118 . The bus  118  may include a number of I/O lines (e.g., selectably coupled to the channels  105  via switches  661  shown in and described in connection with  FIG.  6   ) sufficient for sending instructions to the memory resource  101  and/or for input of data to the memory resource  101  and/or output of data from the memory resource  101  for execution by the processing resource  108  (e.g., in performance of the various functionalities). 
     The controller  110  of the processing resource  108  may include and/or be physically associated with (e.g., be coupled to) a number of components configured to contribute to operations controlled (e.g., performed) by the controller  110 . Such components may, in a number of embodiments, include a combination component  112  configured to assess resource availability in a plurality of separate memory devices  101 , an arbiter component  114  configured to selectably determine whether a first memory resource and a separate second memory resource (e.g., formed on a different vehicle than the first memory resource) are authorized to enable formation of a memory pool, and/or an operating mode component  116  configured to determine a particular number of separate second memory resources to be included in a memory pool with the first memory resource and to direct modulation of operating parameters for access to and transmission of data from the separate second memory resources, as described further herein. 
     Each memory resource  101  may, in a number of embodiments, be coupled to a respective processing resource  108  configured to send a request for formation of a memory pool to a base station (e.g., as shown at  225  and  325  and described in connection with  FIGS.  2  and  3   , respectively). Alternatively or in addition, each memory resource  101  may be coupled to a respective processing resource  108  configured to respond to a request received from the base station  225  for formation of the memory pool and originally sent from a processing resource  108  of another memory resource  101 . For example, in a number of embodiments, each memory resource  101  on a vehicle may, in a number of embodiments, be coupled to a respective processing resource  108  configured to both send a request for formation of the memory pool and respond to a request for formation of the memory pool sent from a processing resource  108  on another vehicle. In some embodiments, however, particular vehicles may be configured to only send a request for formation of the memory pool or respond to a request for formation of the memory pool. 
     In a number of embodiments, a first memory resource  101 - 1  and a second memory resource  101 - 2  each may include at least one volatile memory device  103  (e.g., in a DRAM configuration, among other possible configurations of volatile memory) coupled to a respective processing resource  108  configured to wirelessly share data via the wirelessly coupled base station  225 . Alternatively or in addition, a first memory resource  101 - 1  and a second memory resource  101 - 2  each may include at least one non-volatile memory device  103  (e.g., in a NAND configuration, among other possible configurations of non-volatile memory) coupled to a respective processing resource  108  configured to wirelessly share data via the wirelessly coupled base station  225 . 
     The processing resource  108  may, in a number of embodiments, include and/or be physically associated with a mission profile  117 . The mission profile  117  may be selectably coupled to the controller  110  and/or the components  112 ,  114 ,  116  associated with the controller  110 . The mission profile  117  may be stored by and/or accessible (e.g., for performance of read and/or write operations directed by the controller  110 ) in, for example, in memory (e.g., SRAM) (not shown) of the processing resource  108 . Alternatively or in addition, the mission profile  117  may be stored by the memory resource  101  (e.g., by a memory device  103 ) and may be accessible (e.g., via bus  118 , control circuitry  107 , and/or channels  105 ) by the controller  110  of the processing resource  108  for performance of read and/or write operations. 
     As such, the mission profile  117  may, in a number of embodiments, be formed and/or positioned on a vehicle in order to provide a resource for instructions to be executed by the controller  110  of the processing resource  108  in performance of various functionalities stored on the memory resource  101  (e.g., on the memory devices  103  of the memory resource  101 ). The memory resource  101  may be selectably coupled to a number of hardware components (e.g., positioned and/or formed as parts of the vehicle) configured to perform actions to accomplish a mission stored on the mission profile  117  and consistent with the functionalities stored on the memory resource  101 . On a vehicle, such hardware components may include hardware to, for example, enable steering, braking, and/or acceleration of the vehicle to enable arrival at an intended destination at an intended time in order to accomplish the mission stored on the mission profile  117 . 
     To be “formed on” a vehicle is intended to mean that a resource (e.g., at least one of the resources  101 ,  108 , and/or  120  shown and described in connection with  FIG.  1   ) may be formed on (e.g., during or following manufacture) hardware (e.g., structural components and/or a computing device) of the vehicle. Alternatively of in addition, to be “formed on” a vehicle is intended to mean that a resource may be “positioned on” the vehicle to provide, for example, a computing device of the vehicle as hardware, software, and/or firmware following manufacture of the vehicle (e.g., as a factory- and/or dealer-installed option(s) or as an after-market purchase). To be “formed on” or “positioned on” a vehicle may be abbreviated herein by stating that a resource is “on” the vehicle. 
     The mission profile  117  may, in a number of embodiments, include an intended destination, an intended arrival time, and/or an intended route to be followed to reach the intended destination at the intended arrival time, among many other possibilities for inclusion in the mission profile  117 . The functionalities and/or operations on the memory resource  101  may be stored data values (e.g., code) that when executed by the controller  110  on the processing resource  108  is intended to enable accomplishment of the mission profile  117 . However, a potential for accomplishment of the mission profile  117  may be improved by (e.g., may require) access to and transfer of data from other memory resources  101  (e.g., by formation of a vehicle to vehicle memory pool). 
     The transferred data may relate to potential obstacles (e.g., unexpected obstacles) that may be encountered during transit (e.g., driving) along the intended route. Data transferred from a number of memory resources  101  (e.g., on a number of vehicles located at or near various locations along the intended route) may enable compensatory actions to be performed (e.g., based upon storing corresponding data on the memory resource  101 ) to accomplish or more closely match the mission profile  117  (e.g., by avoiding such an obstacle and/or following a different route to reach the intended destination, among other possibilities). The potential obstacles may include adverse weather conditions (e.g., wind, fog, rain, snow, temperature, etc.), traffic jams, pedestrians on the route (e.g., a parade, protesters, etc.), an accident involving another vehicle and/or pedestrian, speed traps, road construction, slippery road surfaces, among many other possible obstacles. 
     As such, a processing resource  108  for a memory resource  101  on a first vehicle may send a request (e.g., automatically and/or in response to a directive from a human driver) to processing resources on other vehicles for access to a number of memory resources that enable formation of a memory pool to potentially improve functionalities to enable accomplishment of the mission profile  117 . The other vehicles may be located within a proximity of the intended route or potential alternative routes. In a number of embodiments, information (e.g., data) may be provided by (e.g., sent from) a number of base stations (e.g., as shown at  225  and  325  and described in connection with  FIGS.  2  and  3   , respectively) and/or infrastructure (e.g., houses, police/fire/news stations, businesses, factories, etc., as shown at  444 ,  445 , and  446  and described in connection with  FIG.  4   ) located within a proximity of the intended route or potential alternative routes. The data of a memory pool formed with these resources may be in addition to or instead of data sent from resources on other vehicles. 
     Determining and/or following (e.g., tracking) positions (e.g., geographically and/or relative to a particular point) of processing resources  108 , base stations  225 ,  325 , and/or infrastructure  444 ,  445 ,  446  individually and/or relative to one another may, in a number of embodiments, utilize a Global Positioning System (GPS). GPS is a space-based radionavigation system operated by the United States government. It is a global navigation satellite system that may provide geolocation and time information to a GPS receiver on or near the Earth where there is an unobstructed line of sight to four or more GPS satellites. Alternatively or in addition, the determining and/or tracking of positions may be performed via triangulation relative to, for example, positions of a number of base stations, cell towers, etc., and/or via photomapping (e.g., using satellite and/or ground based digital photographic resources), among other possibilities. 
     The processing resource  108  (e.g., on each of the plurality of unitary vehicles  331  and/or the plurality of transport vehicles  334  shown in and described in connection with  FIG.  3   ) may be coupled  119  to a transceiver resource  120 . The transceiver resource  120  may be configured to wirelessly share data between at least two of a plurality of memory resources  101  via a processing resource  108  coupled  118  to each of the memory resources  101 . Each of a plurality of the memory resources may, in a number of embodiments, be on a corresponding plurality of vehicles (e.g., on each of the plurality of unitary vehicles  331  and/or the plurality of transport vehicles  334 ). Each transceiver resource  120  may include, in a number of embodiments, one or more radio frequency (RF) transceivers (e.g., as shown at  661  and described in connection with  FIG.  6   ). A transceiver, as described herein, is intended to mean a device that includes both a transmitter and a receiver. The transmitter and receiver may, in a number of embodiments, be combined and/or share common circuitry. In a number of embodiments, no circuitry may be common between the transmit and receive functions and the device may be termed a transmitter-receiver. Other devices consistent with the present disclosure may include transponders, transverters, and/or repeaters, among similar devices. 
     In a number of embodiments, the transceiver resource  120  may be wirelessly couplable to a base station  225  and/or a cloud processing resource  122  to enable formation of the memory pool. A cloud processing resource  122 , as described herein, is intended to include enablement of access to networking resources from a centralized third-party provider using wide area networking (WAN) or Internet-based access technologies (e.g., as opposed to wireless local area networking (WLAN)). Improved Internet access and/or more reliable WAN bandwidth (e.g., suitable for using 5G wireless technology) may enable processing of network management functions in the cloud. A cloud processing resource  122  may provide centralized management, connectivity, security, control of and/or addition to requests for information (e.g., data), and/or control of the network. This may include distribution of wireless access routers or branch-office devices (e.g., in base stations  225 ) with centralized management in the cloud by a network management device (not shown) of the cloud processing resource  122 . 
     As described herein, the wireless coupling may use 5G technology. 5G may be designed to utilize a higher frequency portion of the wireless spectrum, operating in millimeter wave bands (e.g., 28, 38, and/or 60 gigahertz), compared to other wireless communication technologies (e.g., 4G and previous generations, among other technologies). The millimeter wave bands of 5G may enable data to be transferred more rapidly than technologies using lower frequency bands. For example, a 5G network is estimated to have transfer speeds up to hundreds of times faster than a 4G network, which may enable data transfer rates in a range of tens of megabits per second (MB/s) to tens of GB/s for tens of thousands of users at a time (e.g., in a memory pool, as described herein) by providing a high bandwidth. The actual size of the memory pool, along with the corresponding bandwidth, may be scalable dependent upon the number of vehicles included in the memory pool, among other considerations described herein. 
     For example, the data to be wirelessly shared by at least two memory resources  101  in a memory pool (e.g., a network) may, in a number of embodiments, be transferred directly vehicle to vehicle, be transferred vehicle to vehicle indirectly via a base station  225 , and/or be uploaded to a cloud processing resource  122  (e.g., from a vehicle and/or a base station) via a first processing resource  108  coupled to a first transceiver resource  120 . When uploaded to the cloud processing resource  122 , the data may be made accessible (e.g., processed) by the cloud processing resource  122  for download via a second (e.g., separate) processing resource  108  coupled to a second transceiver resource  120 . The cloud processing resource  122  may be utilized instead of, or in addition to, networking by directly transmitting and/or by directly receiving the data between the vehicles and/or utilizing a base station(s)  225 ,  325  and/or infrastructure  444 ,  445 ,  446  as an intermediary transceiver. 
     As shown in  FIG.  1   , the processing resource  108  includes a plurality of sets of logic units  111 - 1 , . . . ,  111 -N (collectively referred to as logic units  111 ). In a number of embodiments, the processing resource  108  may be configured to execute a plurality of sets of instructions using the plurality of sets of logic units  111 - 1 , . . . ,  111 -N and transmit outputs obtained as a result of the execution via a device-to-device communication technology that is operable in a number of frequency bands including the EHF band. The outputs transmitted may be communicated with other devices such as wirelessly utilizable resources (e.g., wirelessly utilizable resources  200 - 1 , . . . ,  200 - 5 . 
     Although embodiments are not so limited, at least one of the logic units  111  can be an arithmetic logic unit (ALU), which is a circuit that can perform arithmetic and bitwise logic operations on integer binary numbers and/or floating point numbers. As an example, the ALU can be utilized to execute instructions by performing logical operations such as AND, OR, NOT, NAND, NOR, and XOR, and invert (e.g., inversion) logical operations on data (e.g., one or more operands). The processor resource  108  may also include other components that may be utilized for controlling logic units  111 . For example, the processing resource  108  may also include a control logic (e.g., configured to control a data flow coming into and out of the logic units  111 ) and/or a cache coupled to each of the plurality of set of logic units  111 - 1 , . . . ,  111 -N. 
     A number of ALUs can be used to function as a floating point unit (FPU) and/or a graphics processing unit (GPU). Stated differently, at least one of the plurality of sets of logic units  111 - 1 , . . . ,  111 -N may be FPU and/or GPU. As an example, the set of logic units  111 - 1  may be the FPU while the set of logic units  111 -N may be the GPU. 
     As used herein, “FPU” refers to a specialized electronic circuit that operates on floating point numbers. In a number of embodiments, FPU can perform various operations such as addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, square root, and/or bit-shifting, although embodiments are not so limited. As used herein, “GPU” refers to a specialized electronic circuit that rapidly manipulate and alter memory (e.g., memory resource  101 ) to accelerate the creation of image in a frame buffer intended for output to a display. In a number of embodiments, GPU can include a number of logical operations on floating point numbers such that the GPU can perform, for example, a number of floating point operations in parallel. 
     In some embodiments, GPU can provide non-graphical operation. As an example, GPU can also be used to support shading, which is associated with manipulating vertices and textures with man of the same operations supported by CPUs, oversampling and interpolation techniques to reduce aliasing, and/or high-precision color spaces. These example operations that can be provided by the GPU are also associated with matrix and vector computations, which can be provided by GPU as non-graphical operations. As an example, GPU can also be used for computations associated with performing machine-learning algorithms and is capable of providing faster performance than what CPU is capable of providing. For example, in training a deep learning neural networks, GPUs can be 250 times faster than CPUs. As used herein, “machine-learning algorithms” refers to algorithms that uses statistical techniques to provide computing systems an ability to learn (e.g., progressively improve performance on a specific function) with data, without being explicitly programmed. 
     GPU can be present on various locations. For example, the GPU can be internal to (e.g., within) the CPU (e.g., of the network device  102 ). For example, the GPU can be on a same board (e.g., on-board unit) with the CPU without necessarily being internal to the GPU. For example, the GPU can be on a video card that is external to a wirelessly utilizable resource (e.g., wirelessly utilizable resources  200 - 1 , . . . ,  200 - 5  as described in connection with  FIG.  2   ). Accordingly, the wirelessly utilizable resource  100  may be an additional video card that can be external to and wirelessly coupled to a network device such as the wirelessly utilizable resource for graphical and/or non-graphical operations. 
     A number of GPUs of the processing resource  108  may accelerate a video decoding process. As an example, the video decoding process that can be accelerated by the processors  214  may include a motion compensation (mocomp), an inverse discrete cosine transform (iCDT), an inverse modified discrete cosine transform (iMDCT), an in-loop deblocking filter, an intra-frame prediction, an inverse quantization (IQ), a variable-length decoding (VLD), which is also referred to as a slice-level acceleration, a spatial-temporal deinterlacing, an automatic interlace/progressive source detection, a bitstream processing (e.g., context-adaptive variable-length coding and/or context-adaptive binary arithmetic coding), and/or a perfect pixel positioning. As used herein, “a video decoding” refers to a process of converting base-band and/or analog video signals to digital components video (e.g., raw digital video signal). 
     In some embodiments, the processing resource  108  may be further configured to perform a video encoding process, which converts digital video signals to analog video signals. For example, if the network device (including a display) requests the wirelessly utilizable resource  100  to return a specific form of signals such as the analog video signals, the wirelessly utilizable resource  100  may be configured to convert, via the processing resource  108 , digital video signals to analog video signals prior to transmitting those wirelessly to the network device. 
     The wirelessly utilizable resource  100  includes the transceiver  120 . As used herein, a “transceiver” may be referred to as a device including both a transmitter and a receiver. In a number of embodiments, the transceiver  120  may be and/or include a number of radio frequency (RF) transceivers. The transmitter and receiver may, in a number of embodiments, be combined and/or share common circuitry. In a number of embodiments, no circuitry may be common between the transmit and receive functions and the device may be termed a transmitter-receiver. Other devices consistent with the present disclosure may include transponders, transverters, and/or repeaters, among similar devices. 
     In a number of embodiments, a communication technology that the processing resource  108  can utilize may be a device-to-device communication technology as well as a cellular telecommunication technology, and the processing resource  108  may be configured to utilize the same transceiver (e.g., transceiver  120 ) for both technologies, which may provide various benefits such as reducing a design complexity of the wirelessly utilizable resource  100 . As an example, consider devices (e.g., wirelessly utilizable resources  200 - 1 , . . . ,  200 - 5  and/or any other devices that may be analogous to the wirelessly utilizable resource  100 ) in previous approaches, in which the device utilizes a device-to-device communication technology as well as a cellular telecommunication technology in communicating with other devices. The device in those previous approaches may include at least two different transceivers (e.g., each for the device-to-device communication technology and the cellular telecommunication technology, respectively) because each type of communication technology may utilize different network protocols that would further necessarily utilize unique transceivers. As such, the device implemented with different transceivers would increase a design (e.g., structural) complexity that may increase costs associated with the device. On the other hand, in a number of embodiments, the processing resource  108  is configured to utilize the same network protocol for both technologies (e.g., device-to-device communication and cellular telecommunication technologies), which eliminates a need of having different transceivers for different types of wireless communication technologies. Accordingly, a number of the present disclosure may reduce a design complexity of the wirelessly utilizable resource  100 . 
     In a number of embodiments, since resources of the wirelessly utilizable resource  100  can be wirelessly utilizable, the wirelessly utilizable resource  100  may be free of those physical interfaces that would have been included, to physically connect to a motherboard of a network device and/or a display, in expansion cards of previous approaches. For example, the wirelessly utilizable resource  100  as an expansion card may not include a physical interface, which would have been utilized to connect to the mother board, such as a physical bus (e.g., S-100 bus, industry standard architecture (ISA) bus, NuBus bus, Micro Channel bus (or Micro Channel Architecture (MCA), extended industry standard architecture (EISA) bus, VESA local bus (VLB), peripheral component interconnect (PCI) bus, ultra port architecture (UPA), universal serial bus (USB), peripheral component interconnect extended (PCI-X), peripheral component interconnect express (PCIe)) or other physical channels such as accelerated graphics port (AGP) that would have been utilized to connect to the motherboard. For example, the wirelessly utilizable resource  100  as an expansion card may not include a physical interface, which would have been utilized to connect to the display, such as a video graphics array (VGA), digital video interface (DVI), high-definition multimedia interface (HDMI), and/or display port. Accordingly, the wirelessly utilizable resource  100  may be configured to transmit, via the transceiver  120 , those signals, which would have been transmitted by those physical interfaces listed above, wirelessly to the network device and/or display. For example, the signals that can be wirelessly transmitted via the transceiver  120  may include compressed and/or uncompressed digital video signals (that would have been transmitted by HDMI and/or VGA), compressed and/or uncompressed audio signals (that would have been transmitted by HDMI), and/or analog video signals (that would have been transmitted by VGA). 
     Further, the wirelessly utilizable resource  100  may be utilized by other wirelessly utilizable resources (e.g., wirelessly utilizable resources  200 - 1 , . . . ,  200 - 5  in  FIG.  2   ) via a device-to-device communication technology that is operable in an EHF band. The communication technology operable in the EHF band can include a fifth generation (5G) technology or later technology. 5G technology may be designed to utilize a higher frequency portion of the wireless spectrum, including an EHF band (e.g., ranging from 30 to 300 GHz as designated by the ITU). 
     As used herein, the device-to-device communication technology refers to a wireless communication performed directly between a transmitting device and a receiving device, as compared to a wireless communication technology such as the cellular telecommunication technology and/or those communication technologies based on an infrastructure mode, by which network devices communicate with each other by firstly going through an intermediate network device (e.g., base station and/or Access Point (AP)). As such, via the device-to-device communication technology, data to be transmitted by the transmitting device may be directly transmitted to the receiving device without routing through the intermediate network device (e.g., base station  225 ), as described in connection with  FIG.  2   ). In some embodiments. the device-to-device communication may rely on existing infrastructures (e.g., network entity such as a base station); therefore, can be an infrastructure mode. For example, as described herein, the device-to-device communication whose transmission timing is scheduled by a base station can be an infrastructure mode. In some embodiments, the receiving and transmitting devices may communicate in the absent of the existing infrastructures; therefore, can be an ad-hoc mode. As used herein, “an infrastructure mode” refers to an 802.11 networking framework in which devices communicate with each other by first going through an intermediary device such as an AP. As used herein, “ad-hoc mode” refers to an 802-11 networking framework in which devices communicate with each other without the use of intermediary devices such as an AP. The term “ad-hoc mode” can also be referred to as “peer-to-peer mode” or “independent Basic Service Set (IBSS).” 
     As used herein, the cellular telecommunication technology refers to a technology for wireless communication performed indirectly between a transmitting device and a receiving device via a base station, as compared to those types of wireless communication technologies including a device-to-device communication technology. Cellular telecommunications may be those that use resources of a frequency spectrum restricted or regulated by a governmental entity. License frequency spectrum resources may be scheduled for use or access by certain devices and may be inaccessible to other devices. By contrast, resources of shared or unlicensed frequency spectrum may be open and available for use by many devices without the necessity of a governmental license. Allocating licensed and shared or unlicensed frequency resources may present different technical challenges. In the case of licensed frequency spectrum, resources may be controlled by a central entity, such as a base station or entity within a core network. While devices using resources of shared or unlicensed frequency spectrum may contend for access (e.g., one device may wait until a communication channel is clear or unused before transmitting on that channel). Sharing resources may allow for broader utilization at the expense of guaranteed access. 
     Techniques described herein may account for, or may use, both licensed and unlicensed frequency spectrum. In some communication schemes, device-to-device communication may occur on resources of a licensed frequency spectrum, and such communications may be scheduled by a network entity (e.g., a base station). Such schemes may include certain 3GPP-developed protocols, like Long-Term Evolution (LTE) or New Radio (NR). A communication link between devices (e.g. user equipments (UEs)) in such schemes may be referred to as sidelink, while a communication link from a base station to a device may be referred to as a downlink and a communication from a device to a base station may be referred to as an uplink. 
     In other schemes, device-to-device communication may occur on resources of unlicensed frequency spectrum, and devices may contend for access the communication channel or medium. Such schemes may include WiFi or MulteFire. Hybrid schemes, including licensed-assisted access (LAA) may also be employed. 
     As used herein, an EHF band refers to a band of radio frequencies in an electromagnetic spectrum ranging from 30 to 300 gigahertz (GHz) as designated by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), and as described further herein. Ranges of radio frequencies as designated by the ITU can include extremely low frequency (ELF) band ranging from 3 to 30 Hz, super low frequency (SLF) band ranging from 30 Hz to 300 Hz, ultra low frequency (ULF) band ranging from 300 Hz to 3 kilohertz (kHz), very low frequency (VLF) band ranging from 3 to 30 kHz, low frequency (LF) band ranging from 30 kHz to 300 kHz, medium frequency (MF) band ranging from 300 kHz to 3 megahertz (MHz), high frequency (HF) band ranging from 3 MHz to 30 MHz, very high frequency (VHF) band ranging from 30 MHz to 300 MHz, ultra high frequency (UHF) band ranging from 300 MHz to 3 GHz, super high frequency (SHF) band ranging from 3 GHz to 30 GHz, extremely high frequency (EHF) band ranging from 30 GHz to 300 GHz, and tremendously high frequency (THF) band ranging from 0.3 to 3 terahertz (THz). 
     A number of embodiments of the present disclosure can provide various benefits by utilizing a network communication that is operable in a number of frequency bands including a higher frequency portion (e.g., EHF) of the wireless spectrum, as compared to those network communication technologies that utilizes a lower frequency portion of the wireless spectrum only. As an example, the EHF bands of 5G technology may enable data to be transferred more rapidly than technologies (e.g., including technologies of previous generations) using lower frequency bands only. For example, a 5G network is estimated to have transfer speeds up to hundreds of times faster than a 4G network, which may enable data transfer rates in a range of tens of megabits per second (MB/s) to tens of GB/s for tens of thousands of users at a time (e.g., in a memory pool, as described herein) by providing a high bandwidth. For example, a 5G network provides faster transfer rates than the 802.11-based network such as WiFi that operate on unlicensed 2.4 GHz radio frequency band (e.g., Ultra High Frequency (UHF) band). Accordingly, a number of embodiments can enable the wirelessly utilizable resource  100  to be used at a high transfer speed as if the wirelessly utilizable resource  100  were wired to the wirelessly utilizable resource (e.g., wirelessly utilizable resources  200 - 1 , . . . ,  200 - 5 ). 
     In addition to the EHF band, the communication technology of the communication can also be operable in other frequency bands such as the UHF band and the SHF band. As an example, the communication technology can operate in a frequency band below 2 GHz (e.g., low 5G frequencies) and/or in a frequency band between 2 GHz and 6 GHz (e.g., medium 5G frequencies) in addition to a frequency band above 6 GHz (e.g., high 5G frequencies). Further details of a number of frequency bands (e.g., below 6 GHz) in which the 5G technology can operate are defined in Release 15 of the Third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) as New Radio (NR) Frequency Range 1 (FR1), as shown in Table 1. 
     
       
         
           
               
             
               
                 TABLE 1 
               
             
            
               
                   
               
               
                 5G operating bands for FR1 
               
            
           
           
               
               
               
            
               
                 NR 
                   
                   
               
               
                 Operating 
                 Frequency Band 
                 Duplex 
               
               
                 Band 
                 (MHz) 
                 Mode 
               
               
                   
               
               
                 n1  
                 1920-1980; 2110-2170 
                 FDD 
               
               
                 n2  
                 1850-1910; 1930-1990 
                 FDD 
               
               
                 n3  
                 1710-1785; 1805-1880 
                 FDD 
               
               
                 n5  
                 824-849; 869-894 
                 FDD 
               
               
                 n7  
                 2500-2570; 2620-2690 
                 FDD 
               
               
                 n8  
                 880-915; 925-960 
                 FDD 
               
               
                 n20 
                 791-821; 832-862 
                 FDD 
               
               
                 n28 
                 703-748; 758-803 
                 FDD 
               
               
                 n38 
                 2570-2620 
                 TDD 
               
               
                 n41 
                 2496-2690 
                 TDD 
               
               
                 n50 
                 1432-1517 
                 TDD 
               
               
                 n51 
                 1427-1432 
                 TDD 
               
               
                 n66 
                 1710-1780; 2110-2200 
                 FDD 
               
               
                 n70 
                 1695-1710; 1995-2020 
                 FDD 
               
               
                 n71 
                 617-652; 663-698 
                 FDD 
               
               
                 n74 
                 1427-1470; 1475-1518 
                 FDD 
               
               
                 n75 
                 1432-1517 
                 SDL 
               
               
                 n76 
                 1427-1432 
                 SDL 
               
               
                 n78 
                 3300-3800 
                 TDD 
               
               
                 n77 
                 3300-4200 
                 TDD 
               
               
                 n79 
                 4400-5000 
                 TDD 
               
               
                 n80 
                 1710-1785 
                 SUL 
               
               
                 n81 
                 880-915 
                 SUL 
               
               
                 n82 
                 832-862 
                 SUL 
               
               
                 n83 
                 703-748 
                 SUL 
               
               
                 n84 
                 1920-1980 
                 SUL 
               
               
                   
               
            
           
         
       
     
     Further, details of a number of frequency bands (e.g., above 6 GHz) in which the 5G technology can operate are defined in Release 15 of the 3GPP as NR Frequency Range 2 (FR2), as shown in Table 2. 
     
       
         
           
               
             
               
                 TABLE 2 
               
             
            
               
                   
               
               
                 5G operating bands for FR2 
               
            
           
           
               
               
               
            
               
                 NR 
                   
                   
               
               
                 Operating 
                 FREQUENCY BAND 
                 Duplex 
               
               
                 Band 
                 (MHz) 
                 Mode 
               
               
                   
               
               
                 n257 
                 26500-29500 
                 TDD 
               
               
                 n258 
                 24250-27500 
                 TDD 
               
               
                 n260 
                 37000-40000 
                 TDD 
               
               
                   
               
            
           
         
       
     
     In some embodiments, a number of frequency bands in which a communication technology (e.g., device-to-device communication technology and/or cellular telecommunication technology using 5G technology) utilized for the communication  106  may be operable can further include the THF band in addition to those frequency bands such as the SHF, UHF, and EHF bands. The memory, transceiver, and/or the processor described herein may be a resource that can be wirelessly utilizable via respective communication technologies such as 5G technology. 
     As used herein, FDD stands for frequency division duplex, TDD stands for time division duplex, SUL stands for supplementary uplink, and SDL stands for supplementary downlink. FDD and TDD are each a particular type of a duplex communication system. As used herein, a duplex communication system refers to a point-to point system having two connected parties and/or devices that can communicate with one another in both directions. TDD refers to duplex communication links where uplink is separated from downlink by the allocation of different time slots in the same frequency band. FDD refers to a duplex communication system, in which a transmitter and receiver operate at different frequency bands. SUL/SDL refer to a point-to-point communication system having two connected parties and/or devices that can communicate with one another in a unilateral direction (e.g., either via an uplink or a downlink, but not both). 
     The 5G technology may be selectively operable in one or more of low, medium, and/or high 5G frequency bands based on characteristics of, for example, the communication. As an example, the low 5G frequency may be utilized in some use cases (e.g., enhanced mobile broadband (eMBB), ultra-reliable and low-latency communications (URLLC), massive machine-type communications (mMTC)), in which extremely wide area needs to be covered by the 5G technology. As an example, the medium 5G frequency may be utilized in some use cases (e.g., eMBB, URLLC, mMTC), in which higher data rate than that of the low 5G frequencies is desired for the communication technology. As an example, the high 5G frequency may be utilized in some use cases (e.g., eMBB), in which extremely high data rate is desired for the 5G technology. 
     As used herein, eMBB, URLLC, mMTC each refers to one of three categories of which the ITU has defined as services that the 5G technology can provide. As defined by the ITU, eMBB aims to meet the people&#39;s demand for an increasingly digital lifestyle and focuses on services that have high requirements for bandwidth, such as high definition (HD) videos, virtual reality (VR), and augmented reality (AR). As defined by the ITU, URLLC aims to meet expectations for the demanding digital industry and focuses on latency-sensitive services, such as assisted and automated driving, and remote management. As defined by the ITU, mMTC aims to meet demands for a further developed digital society and focuses on services that include high requirements for connection density, such as smart city and smart agriculture. 
     As used herein, a channel bandwidth refers to a frequency range occupied by data and/or instructions when being transmitted (e.g., by an individual carrier) over a particular frequency band. As an example, a channel bandwidth of 100 MHz may indicate a frequency range from 3700 MHZ to 3800 MHZ, which can be occupied by data and/or instructions when being transmitted over n77 frequency band, as shown in Table 1. As indicated in Release 15 of the 3GPP, a number of different channel bandwidth such as a channel bandwidth equal to or greater than 50 MHz (e.g., 50 MHz, 100 MHz, 200 MHz, and/or 400 Mhz) may be utilized for the 5G technology. 
     Embodiments are not limited to a particular communication technology; however, various types of communication technologies may be employed for the communication. The various types of communication technologies of the wirelessly utilizable resources (e.g., wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1 , . . . ,  200 - 5  in  FIG.  2   ) can utilize may include, for example, cellular telecommunication technology including 0-5 generations broadband cellular network technologies, device-to-device to communication including Bluetooth, Zigbee, and/or 5G, and/or other wireless communication utilizing an intermediary device (e.g., WiFi utilizing an AP), although embodiments are not so limited. 
       FIG.  2    is a block diagram of examples of a system including wirelessly utilizable resources in accordance with a number of embodiments of the present disclosure. As illustrated in  FIG.  2   , the system  223  may, in a number of embodiments, include a plurality of elements. For example, the plurality of elements of the system  223  may be a number of wirelessly utilizable resources  200 - 1 , . . . ,  200 - 5  (collectively referred to as wirelessly utilizable resources  200 ) and/or a base station  225 . At least a portion of the wirelessly utilizable resources  200  may include a local commodity DRAM and may utilize the resources of the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  as supplemental resources. The wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  includes resources (e.g., a memory resource, a transceiver, and/or a processor) at least of which can be wirelessly utilizable (e.g., shared) by the wirelessly utilizable resources  200 . 
     The wirelessly utilizable resources  200  can be various user devices. As an example, the wirelessly utilizable resources  200  can be computing devices such as laptops, phones, tablets, desktops, wearable smart devices, etc. In some embodiments, the user devices may be mobile as well. As used herein, a “mobile user device” may be a device that is portable and utilizes a portable power supply. In a number of embodiments, the wirelessly utilizable resources  200  can include a local DRAM and a memory resource that can be included in the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  and utilizable by the wirelessly utilizable resources  200  and may be supplemental to the wirelessly utilizable resources  200 . 
     The wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  including a wirelessly utilizable resource can be a wireless electronic component of at least one of the wirelessly utilizable resources  200 . As used herein, “an electronic component” refers to an electronic component that can provide additional functions to a network device and/or assist the network device in furthering a particular function. For example, an electronic component may include various types of components (e.g., expansion card) such as a video card, sound card, primary storage devices (e.g., main memory), and/or secondary (auxiliary) storage devices (e.g., flash memory, optical discs, magnetic disk, and/or magnetic tapes), although embodiments are not so limited. As used herein, “a wireless electronic component” refers to an electronic component that is wirelessly coupled to a network device. 
     Accordingly, as an example, the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  may be wirelessly utilized by the wirelessly utilizable resources  200  for various functions. As an example, the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  may be utilized for graphical operations that would require high-performance processing and/or memory resources such as memory intensive games and/or high quality video associated with a high degree of resolutions and/or frame rates. Further, as an example, the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  may be utilized for non-graphical operations such as a number of operations of applications associated with machine-learning algorithms that would require high-performance processing and/or memory resources. 
     In some embodiments, at least a portion of the wirelessly utilizable resources  200  may be a small form factor (SFF) device such as a handheld computing device (e.g., personal computer (PC)). A degree of performance that can be often provided by the SSF device can be relatively low due to its limited size and volume. Further, the SSF device may lack a number of channels by which expansion cards such as a high-performance video card can be added. Accordingly, providing a mechanism to wirelessly add a high-performance video card such as the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  to the SSF device can provide benefits such as performing, at the SSF device, memory-intensive operations (e.g., memory intensive games and/or high quality video associated with a high degree of resolutions and/or frame rates), which would have not been properly performed at the SSF device absent the wirelessly utilizable resources. 
     In a number of embodiments, the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  may be wirelessly utilized via a device-to-device communication technology, for example, by the wirelessly utilizable resources  200  as shown in  FIG.  2   . For example, as illustrated in connection with  FIG.  1   , the device-to-device communication technology can operate in higher frequency portion of the wireless spectrum, including an UHF, SHF, EHF and/or THE band, as defined according to the ITU. However, embodiments are not so limited. For example, other network communication technologies of a device-to-device communication technology may be employed within the system  223 . As an example, the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  may communicate with at least one of the wirelessly utilizable resources  200  via a different type of device-to-device communication technology such as a Bluetooth, Zigbee, and/or other types of device-to-device communication technologies. 
     As shown in  FIG.  2   , the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  may be wirelessly utilized by the wirelessly utilizable resources  200  via the base station  225 . As an example, a communication technology that can be utilized between the wirelessly utilizable resources  200 - 4  and the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  may be a cellular telecommunication technology. In a number of embodiments, the cellular telecommunication technology that can be utilized for communicating between the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 4  and the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  can include a 5G cellular telecommunication technology that operates in at least one of a number of frequency bands including the UHF, SHF, EHF, and/or THF. 
     The term “base station” may be used in the context of mobile telephony, wireless computer networking and/or other wireless communications. As an example, a base station  225  may include a GPS receiver at a known position, while in wireless communications it may include a transceiver connecting a number of other devices to one another and/or to a wider area. As an example, in mobile telephony, a base station  225  may provide a connection between mobile phones and the wider telephone network. As an example, in a computing network, a base station  225  may include a transceiver acting as a router for electrical components (e.g., memory resource  101  and processing resource  108  in  FIG.  1   ) in a network, possibly connecting them to a WAN, WLAN, the Internet, and/or the cloud. For wireless networking, a base station  225  may include a radio transceiver that may serve as a hub of a local wireless network. As an example, a base station  225  also may be a gateway between a wired network and the wireless network. As an example, a base station  225  may be a wireless communications station installed at a fixed location. 
     In a number of embodiments, the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  may utilize the same network protocol and same transceiver (e.g., RF transceiver) for a device-to-device communication technology (e.g., 5G device-to-device communication technology) as well as a cellular telecommunication technology (e.g., 5G cellular telecommunication technology), as described in connection with  FIG.  1   . As an example, the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  may utilize the same network protocol in communicating with the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 4  (e.g., via a cellular telecommunication technology through the base station  225 ) as well as with the wirelessly utilizable resources  200  (e.g., via a device-to-device communication technology). 
     In a number of embodiments, various types of network protocols may be utilized for communicating data within the system  223  (e.g., among the wirelessly utilizable resources  200 , between the wirelessly utilizable resources  200 , between the wirelessly utilizable resources  200  and the base station  225 , etc.). The various types of network protocols may include the time-division multiple access (TDMA), code-division multiple access (CDMA), space-division multiple access (SDMA), frequency division multiple access (FDMA), orthogonal FDMA (OFDMA), single-carrier (SC)-FDMA, and/or non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA), although embodiments are not so limited. 
     In some embodiments, cellular telecommunication technologies (e.g., between the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  and the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 4 ) may be performed via (e.g., include) a NOMA. As used herein, the NOMA refers to a network protocol that separates signals according to a power domain. For example, signals may be received (e.g., from the user) in an intentionally-introduced mutual interference and can be separated from each other according to differences on their power levels. As such, the signals received and to be processed pursuant to the NOMA may be non-orthogonal in time, frequency, and/or code, as compared to those orthogonal multiple-access (OMA) schemes, in which different users are allocated according to orthogonal resources, either in time, frequency, and/or code domain. Accordingly, utilizing a non-orthogonal network protocols such as the NOMA may provide benefits such as reduced latencies associated with separating users based on factors other than power domain, which may enable massive Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO). 
     In a number of embodiments, the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  may be utilized by the wirelessly utilizable resources  200  at a discrete time. For example, the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  may be utilized by the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 3  during a subsequent period of a particular period during which the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  was, for example, utilized by the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 2 . As such, the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  may be utilized by each of the wirelessly utilizable resources  200  at different times (e.g., non-overlapping time periods). However, embodiments are not so limited. For example, the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  may be simultaneously utilized by the wirelessly utilizable resources  200 . As an example, the wirelessly utilizable resource  200 - 1  may be physically and/or logically partitioned such that the partitioned portions may be simultaneously utilized by the wirelessly utilizable resources 
       FIG.  3    is a block diagram of examples of a network  330  for wirelessly coupling selected wirelessly utilizable resources for formation of a memory pool in accordance with a number of embodiments of the present disclosure. The network  330  may, in a number of embodiments, include a plurality of elements (e.g., two or more vehicles) that may be included in a memory pool, as described herein. 
     As illustrated in  FIG.  3   , the elements that may potentially be included in the network  330  may, in a number of embodiments, be a number of unitary vehicles  331  and/or transport vehicles  333 . In some embodiments the network  330  may potentially include a number of base stations  325 . 
     A unitary vehicle  331 , as described herein, is intended to mean a vehicle that may be owned, leased, rented, or borrowed to enable travel from an origin to an intended destination, or vice versa. The unitary vehicle  331  may be driven or directed to travel by a person (e.g., a driver) and/or autonomously (e.g., via a memory resource coupled to a processing resource, as described herein). The travel may be by the unitary vehicle  331  and a number of passengers (e.g., the driver and/or a number of other persons) or the vehicle itself acting as an autonomous vehicle. Examples of a unitary vehicle  331  may include: an automobile (e.g., a car, pickup truck, mini-van, personally-operated truck and/or van, sports utility vehicle, etc.); a motorcycle; taxi cab; bus; a limousine; airplane; helicopter; aerial drone; watercraft (e.g., a privately owned and/or commercial boat or ship operable in a port environment and/or shipping lanes), jet-ski, submarine, locomotive (e.g., connected to a number of railway cars) operable on a track; and mobile equipment (e.g., a manually-driven or autonomous pallet jack, bin, cart, etc.) operated within and/or outside a commercial or industrial facility; among many other such possibilities. 
     A transport vehicle  333 , as described herein, is intended to mean a vehicle that may be owned, leased, rented, or borrowed to enable transport of goods and/or services (e.g., shipment of a commercially provided product or products) from an origin to an intended destination, or vice versa. The transport vehicle  333  may be driven or directed to travel by a person (e.g., a driver) and/or autonomously (e.g., via a memory resource coupled to a processing resource, as described herein). The travel may be by the transport vehicle  333  and a number of passengers (e.g., the driver and/or a number of other persons), which also may include the transported product or products (e.g., in a load bed of the transport vehicle  333 ) or the transport vehicle itself acting as an autonomous vehicle. Examples of a transport vehicle  333  may include: a commercially-operated truck and/or van; a sequence of trucks and/or vans operable as an automotive train, fleet, and/or convoy (e.g., on or in a designated lane on a road, highway, interstate, etc.); a sequence of commercially-operated boats and/or ships operable in a port environment and/or shipping lanes; a sequence of commercially-operated aerial drones operable on or in a designated airstrip, runway, and/or flight path; among many other such possibilities. 
     A base station  325 , as also shown at  225  and described in connection with  FIG.  2    and elsewhere herein, is intended to mean a land station in a mobile service (e.g., according to International Telecommunication Union&#39;s (ITU) Radio Regulations). The term may be used in the context of mobile telephony, wireless computer networking and other wireless communications, and/or in land surveying. A base station  325  may include a GPS receiver at a known position, while in wireless communications it may include a transceiver connecting a number of other devices to one another and/or to a wider area. In mobile telephony, a base station  325  may provide a connection between mobile phones and the wider telephone network. In a computing network, a base station  325  may include a transceiver acting as a router for compute components (e.g., memory resources  101  and processing resources  108 ) in a network (e.g., a memory pool), possibly connecting them to a WAN, WLAN, the Internet, and/or the cloud. For wireless networking, a base station  325  may include a radio transceiver that may serve as a hub of a local wireless network. A base station  325  also may be a gateway between a wired network and the wireless network. A base station  325  may be a wireless communications station installed at a fixed location. 
     In a geographical area with a relatively low density of memory resources  101 , processing resources  108 , and/or transceiver resources  120  (e.g., rural areas relative to urban areas, as described in connection with  FIG.  4   ), the low density may reduce likelihood of construction of a new base station (e.g., by making such construction commercially nonviable, among other possible reasons). As a result, wireless communication to enable formation of a memory pool may be enabled by installing a repeater. A repeater is a type of base station that extends the range of mobile radio transceivers (e.g., that wirelessly communicate via transceiver resources  120 ). A repeater may include a bidirectional amplifier used to improve reception of wireless signals. A repeater system also may include an antenna that receives and transmits signal from, for example, base stations, cell towers, coaxial cables, etc., via a signal amplifier and/or a rebroadcast antenna. Some rural, suburban, and/or urban environments, however, may include a plurality of base stations within a particular area (e.g., as determined by a reception/transmission ranges of cell towers and/or possible obstruction of the same by infrastructure, such as buildings, etc.). 
     Hence, in a number of embodiments, the network  330  illustrated in  FIG.  3    may enable wireless sharing of data by formation of a memory pool between a plurality  332  of the unitary vehicles  331 , a plurality  334  of transport vehicles  333 , and/or a plurality  336  of base stations  325 . Alternatively or in addition, in a number of embodiments, the network  330  may enable wireless sharing of data by formation of a memory pool between  338  at least one of the plurality  332  of the unitary vehicles  331  and at least one of the plurality  334  of the transport vehicles  333 . The network  330  also may enable wireless sharing of data by formation of a memory pool between  337  at least one of the plurality  332  of the unitary vehicles  331  and at least one of the plurality  336  of the base stations  325  and/or a memory pool between  339  at least one of the plurality  332  of the transport vehicles  333  and at least one of the plurality  336  of the base stations  325 . Alternatively or in addition, in a number of embodiments, a memory pool may be formed between at least one of the plurality  332  of the unitary vehicles  331  and/or at least one of the plurality  334  of the transport vehicles  333  and infrastructure (e.g., houses, police/fire/news stations, businesses, factories, etc., as shown at  444 ,  445 ,  446 ) that includes memory resources  101 , processing resources  108 , and/or transceiver resources  120  as described herein. 
     Accordingly, as described herein, a first processing resource  208 - 1  may be coupled to a first memory resource  201 - 1  and a wireless base station  225  may be coupled to the first processing resource  208 - 1  (e.g., as shown and described in connection with  FIG.  2    and elsewhere herein). The first memory resource  201 - 1 , the first processing resource  208 - 1 , and the base station  225  may be configured to enable formation of a memory pool between the first memory resource  201 - 1  and a second memory resource (e.g., as shown at  201 - 4  in  FIG.  2   ) at (e.g., positioned on) a vehicle responsive to a request to access the second memory resource from the first processor transmitted via the base station. The “vehicle” is intended to mean one or more vehicles from among the plurality of unitary vehicles  331  and/or the plurality of transport vehicles  333  illustrated in  FIG.  3   . In a number of embodiments, the base station  225  may be further configured to transmit additional data from the first memory resource  201 - 1  to the vehicle responsive to another request from the vehicle or a network management device (e.g., of the cloud processing resource  122 ). 
     The first memory resource  201 - 1 , the first processing resource  208 - 1  coupled to the first memory resource  201 - 1 , and a transceiver resource  220 - 1  coupled to the first processing resource  208 - 1  may be configured to enable formation of a memory pool between the first memory resource  201 - 1  and a second memory resource  201 - 4  responsive to a request to access the second memory resource  101 - 4  (e.g., the request received from the first processing resource  208 - 1 ). A controller  110  may be coupled to the first processing resource  208 - 1 . 
     The controller  110  may, in a number of embodiments, be configured to selectably determine a particular functionality, as described herein, for which data is to be shared by the second memory resource  201 - 4  with the first memory resource  201 - 1 . The controller  110  may be further configured to selectably determine, responsive to prioritization of requested data, a particular memory device (e.g., determined from memory devices  103 - 1 ,  103 - 2 , . . . ,  103 -N) of the first memory resource  201 - 1  to which data is to be shared by being received, via the base station  225  (e.g., using the transceiver resources  220 ), from the second memory resource  201 - 4  wirelessly coupled to the base station  225 . For example, a request from the first processing resource  208 - 1  (e.g., positioned on or coupled to the base station  225 ) for the access to the second memory resource  201 - 4  may be prioritized such that the first processing resource  208 - 1  processes the data received from the second memory resource  201 - 4  to enable, in a number of embodiments, direction of transit of a vehicle (e.g., an autonomous vehicle) before a response may be provided to a request for data that is received, by being wirelessly coupled to the base station  225 , from another second processing resource  208 - 2  wirelessly coupled to the first memory resource  201 - 1 . 
     The controller  110  may be further configured to selectably determine, responsive to prioritization of requested data, a particular memory device  103  of the first memory resource  201 - 1  from which data is to be shared by being transmitted, via the base station  225 , to the second processing resource  208 - 4  coupled to the second memory resource  201 - 4 . For example, a request from the second processing resource  208 - 4  (e.g., formed on an autonomous vehicle) for the access to the first memory resource  201 - 1  may be prioritized such that the first processing resource  208 - 1  processes the data received from the second memory resource  201 - 4  to enable, in a number of embodiments, direction of transit of the autonomous vehicle before a response may be provided to a request for data that is received, by being wirelessly coupled to the base station  225 , from another second processing resource  208 - 2  coupled to the first memory resource  201 - 1 . The second memory resource  201 - 4  coupled to the second processing resource  208 - 4  may be configured to share data between the second memory resource  201 - 4  and the first memory resource  201 - 1  by being wirelessly coupled to the base station  225 . The first memory resource  201 - 1 , the second memory resource  201 - 4 , and the base station  225  may be configured (e.g., via the transceiver resources  220 ) to enable performance of an operation directed by the first processing resource  208 - 1  based upon processing of the data shared between the first memory resource  201 - 1  and the second memory resource  201 - 4 . The performance of the operation by the first processing resource  208 - 1  may be enabled based upon processing of data values shared by the second processing resource  208 - 4  coupled to the second memory resource  201 - 4 . The data values shared by the second processing resource  208 - 4  may, in a number of embodiments, include at least one data value different from data values previously stored by the first memory resource  201 - 1 . Storage of the at least one different data value may enable performance of an operation that is different based upon processing of code including the at least one different data value relative to performance of an operation based upon processing of the code prior to the at least one different data value being stored. 
     The base station  225  can include or be coupled to a first radio frequency (RF) transceiver as the transceiver resource  220 - 1  and the first processing resource  208 - 1 . The transceiver resource  220 - 1  and/or the base station  225  may be wirelessly couplable to a cloud processing resource  122 , as described herein, to enable formation of the memory pool. The transceiver resources  220  may, in a number of embodiments, include a first RF transceiver (e.g., as shown at  663  and described in connection with  FIG.  6   ) coupled to the first processing resource  208 - 1  and a second RF transceiver coupled to a second processing resource  208 - 4  to enable formation, by being wirelessly coupled to the base station  225 , of the memory pool between the first memory resource  201 - 1  and the second memory resource  201 - 4 . 
     The second memory resource  201 - 4  and the second processing resource  208 - 4  may, in a number of embodiments, be on a first vehicle (e.g., an autonomous vehicle) and another second memory resource  201 - 2  and another second processing resource  208 - 2  may be on a vehicle (e.g., a second autonomous vehicle). The data shared by two or more of the second memory resources (e.g., selected from memory resources  201 - 2 , . . . ,  201 - 5 , among possible additional memory resources) by being wirelessly coupled to the base station  225  may enable direction of transit to an intended destination by the first vehicle and/or the second vehicle. The transit may be directed (e.g., by controller  110 ) to include performance of at least one operation by, for example, a first autonomous vehicle or a second autonomous vehicle that is different from an operation performed based upon data values previously stored by the respective first memory resource  201 - 1  or second memory resource  201 - 4 . 
       FIG.  4    is a block diagram illustrating an example of environments that correspond to a range of densities of wirelessly utilizable resources couplable for formation of a memory pool in accordance with a number of embodiments of the present disclosure. The range of densities  440  of resources may, in a number of embodiments, correspond to a “low” density of such resources, as shown at or near the left side of  FIG.  4   , through a “high” density of such resources, as shown at or near the right side. 
     A density range  440  of such resources may correspond to a number of resources  441  located (e.g., fixedly and/or movably at a particular point in time and/or in a particular time period) within a particular area (e.g., geographically defined and/or defined by base station, cell tower, cloud coverage, among other possibilities for defining the area). The density of resources  440  and/or the number of resources  441  in a particular area may, in a number of embodiments, contribute to determination of a size of a memory pool between a plurality of such resources that are coupled to wirelessly share data. For example, a low density of such resources may enable formation of a memory pool that includes fewer such resources than may be included in a memory pool formed where there is a high density of such resources, with the memory pool potentially including an intermediate number of such resources where the density  440  is between low and high. 
     The number of resources  441  in a particular area may correspond to a number of memory resources  101 , processing resources  108 , transceiver resources  120 , and/or base stations  425  within the particular area. The number of resources  441  may be formed and/or positioned on, in a number of embodiments, a corresponding number of unitary vehicles  431 , transport vehicles  433 , base stations  425 , and/or infrastructure (e.g., houses  444 , police/fire/news stations, and/or businesses  445 , factories and/or corporate offices, etc.,  446 ) located within the area and/or within a proximity of an intended route or potential alternative routes to be transited by the unitary vehicles  431  and/or transport vehicles  433 . An increasing density  440 , an increasing number of such resources  441 , and/or an increasing number of different types of such resources (e.g., a mixture of unitary vehicles  431 , transport vehicles  433 , number of base stations  425 , and/or infrastructure  444 ,  445 ,  446 ) within an area may correspond to an increasing complexity  442  of such resources in the area. 
     An area having a low density  440 , number  441 , and/or complexity  442  of resources may, for example, be a rural area, as shown at or near the left side of  FIG.  4   . Such a rural area may include a number of routes of transit  443  (e.g., widely separated interstate freeways, state and/or county highways, etc.) that may correspond to potential intended routes of transit for unitary vehicles  431  and/or transport vehicles  433 . Such a rural area may, at a particular time point and/or in a particular time period, have as few as two unitary vehicles  431 - 1  or as few as two transport vehicles  433  and/or as few as one unitary vehicle  431 - 1  and one transport vehicle  433  to form a memory pool. In some situations, such a rural area and/or a portion of the routes of transit  443  may or may not include a base station and/or infrastructure to contribute to formation of the memory pool. Accordingly, the memory pool may be formed via direct wireless coupling between processing resources of the unitary vehicles  431  and/or transport vehicles  433 . 
     An area having an intermediate density  440 , number  441 , and/or complexity  442  of resources may, for example, be a suburban area, as shown at or near the middle of  FIG.  4   . Such a suburban area may potentially include the routes of transit  443  for unitary vehicles  431  and/or transport vehicles  433  present in the rural areas. Such a suburban area, at a particular time point and/or in a particular time period, may be more likely to have at least two unitary vehicles  431 - 2  to form a memory pool. The suburban area may or may not include any transport vehicles  433  at a particular time point and/or in a particular time period. Such a suburban area may be more likely to include at least one base station  425 - 1  and/or infrastructure  444 ,  445  to contribute to formation of the memory pool. Accordingly, the memory pool may be formed via direct or indirect wireless coupling between processing resources of the unitary vehicles  431 - 2  and/or transport vehicles  433 . In a number of embodiments, the memory pool may be formed between the processing resources of the unitary vehicles  431  and/or transport vehicles  433  by indirect wireless coupling via the base station  425 - 1  and/or the infrastructure  444 ,  445 . 
     An area having a high density  440 , number  441 , and/or complexity  442  of resources may, for example, be an urban area, as shown at or near the right side of  FIG.  4   . Such an urban area may potentially include the routes of transit  443  for unitary vehicles  431  and/or transport vehicles  433  present in the rural and/or suburban areas. Such an urban area, at a particular time point and/or in a particular time period, may be more likely to have more than two unitary vehicles  431 - 3  to form a memory pool. The urban area may or may not include any transport vehicles  433  at a particular time point and/or in a particular time period. Such an urban area may be more likely to include more than one base station  425 - 2  and/or infrastructure  446  (e.g., in addition to infrastructure  444 ,  445 ) to contribute to formation of the memory pool. Accordingly, the memory pool may be formed via direct wireless coupling between processing resources of the unitary vehicles  431 - 3  and/or transport vehicles  433 . In a number of embodiments, the memory pool may be formed between the processing resources of the unitary vehicles  431  and/or transport vehicles  433  by indirect wireless coupling via the base stations  425 - 2  and/or the infrastructure  444 ,  445 ,  446 . 
       FIG.  5    is a block diagram illustrating an example of a route for vehicles upon which the wirelessly utilizable resources may be implemented for formation of a memory pool in accordance with a number of embodiments of the present disclosure. The route  550  may, in a number of embodiments, represent an intended route upon which the vehicles are transiting toward an intended destination. The intended destination may vary dependent upon the individual vehicle being considered. The route  550  may be a road, street, highway, interstate, etc., in a rural, suburban, and/or urban area (e.g., as described in connection with  FIG.  4   ). 
     The route  550  may be utilized for transit of, at a particular time and/or in a particular time period, a number of transport vehicles (e.g., as shown at  533 - 1 ,  533 - 2 , . . . ,  533 -M) and/or a number of unitary vehicles (e.g., as shown at  531 - 1 ,  531 - 2 , . . . ,  531 -O). The route  550  or at least a portion  551  of the route (e.g., one or more lanes) may, in a number of embodiments, be designated for transit of a number of transport vehicles  533 . For example, the portion  551  of the route  550  may be designated, or at least utilized, for a plurality of automated transport vehicles  533 - 1 ,  533 - 2 , . . . ,  533 -M transiting in sequence (e.g., as a convoy) toward an intended destination, although at least some of the transport vehicles may continue on toward various other destinations after reaching the intended destination. 
     Alternatively or in addition, the route  550  or at least a portion  552 ,  553  of the route  550  (e.g., one or more lanes) may, in a number of embodiments, be designated for transit of a number of unitary vehicles  531 . For example, the portion  552 ,  553  of the route  550  may be designated, or at least utilized, for automated unitary vehicles  531 - 1 ,  531 - 2 , . . . ,  531 -O each transiting toward an intended destination, which may, in a number of embodiments, vary between each unitary vehicle. At least one portion  552  (e.g., lane) of the route  550  upon which the unitary vehicles  531  may transit may be adjacent (e.g., next to) a portion  551  designated for transit of transport vehicles  533 . For example, a lane designated for transit of unitary vehicles may be positioned on each side of a lane or lanes designated for transit of transport vehicles. The portion shown at  553  may represent one or more lanes designated for transit of unitary vehicles  531  extending outward relative to the portion  552  adjacent the portion  551  designated for transit of transport vehicles  533 . 
     In some embodiments, each portion  551  (e.g., lane) designated for transit of transport vehicles  533  may be wider than each portion  552 ,  553  (e.g., lane) designated for transit of unitary vehicles  531 . In some embodiments, each portion  551  designated for transit of transport vehicles  533  and/or each portion  552 ,  553  designated for transit of unitary vehicles  531  may be equipped with sensors (e.g., that are configured to wirelessly communicate with processing resources  108  on the vehicles) to contribute to determining and/or tracking positions of the transport vehicles  533  and/or unitary vehicles and/or to verify that the transport vehicles  533  and/or unitary vehicles are transiting in the appropriate portions of the route  550 . 
       FIG.  6    is a schematic diagram illustrating an example of wirelessly utilizable resources selectably coupled to circuitry to enable formation of a memory pool in accordance with a number of embodiments of the present disclosure. The resources selectably coupled to the circuitry  660  illustrated in  FIG.  6    include a processing resource  608  and channels  605 - 1 , . . . ,  605 -N coupled to memory devices included in a memory resource (e.g., as shown at  103 - 1 , . . . ,  103 -N and  101 , respectively, in  FIG.  1   ). The processing resource  608  is illustrated to include a controller  610 . The controller  610  is illustrated as being formed from a plurality of sections (e.g., sections  610 - 1 ,  610 - 2 , . . . ,  610 -N) for purposes of clarity in illustrating connections with the circuitry shown in  FIG.  6   , although the controller  610  may be formed as a single component (e.g., as shown in  FIG.  1   ). As described further herein, the circuitry (e.g., as shown at  618  and/or  661 ) and/or the controller  610  may be coupled to a number of RF transceivers (e.g., as shown at  663 - 1 ,  663 - 2 , . . . ,  663 -N) of the transceiver resource  120  to enable transmission of requests for and/or receipt of wirelessly shared data for formation of a memory pool. The resources just described each may, in a number of embodiments, be configured to perform at least a portion of the functions described in connection with  FIGS.  1 - 5  and  7 - 8    in addition to those described in connection with  FIG.  6   . 
     Controller section  610 - 1  may be selectably coupled via I/O line  618 - 1  (e.g., of the bus  118  described in connection with  FIG.  1   ) to the channel  605 - 1  to issue a command and/or an address from the processing resource  608  related to performance of a particular functionality to be directed to an appropriate one or more memory devices selectably coupled to the I/O line  618 - 1 . The command and/or the address may enable retrieval via I/O line  618 - 1  of previously stored data from the appropriate memory devices and/or an appropriate number of rows of a memory device to enable performance of the particular functionality by the controller section  610 - 1 . 
     In a number of embodiments, I/O line  618 - 1  may, via a command and/or an address, enable input of newly received data (e.g., received via formation of a memory pool between a first memory resource  201 - 1  and a second memory resource  201 - 2  by processing resource  608 ) to be stored by appropriate memory devices and/or appropriate rows of a memory device to enable improved performance of the particular functionality by the controller section  610 - 1 . Alternatively or in addition, I/O line  618 - 1  may, via a command and/or an address, enable output of previously stored data (e.g., output via formation of a memory pool with second memory resource  201 - 2  by processing resource  608 ) from appropriate memory devices and/or appropriate rows of a memory device in response to a request for such data by another processing resource (e.g., second processing resource  208 - 2 ). 
     The particular command and/or address issued by the processing resource  608  via controller section  610 - 1  may selectably determine whether I/O line  618 - 1  is configured to enable the input of the newly received data or the output of the previously stored data versus being configured to enable retrieval of previously stored data to enable performance of the particular functionality by the controller section  610 - 1 . As such, a first command and/or address issued via controller section  610 - 1  may direct that a switch  661 - 1  of the circuitry associated with I/O line  618 - 1  be opened to disconnect channel  605 - 1  from controller section  610 - 1  while connecting (e.g., coupling) a portion of the I/O line  618 - 1  that remains connected to channel  605 - 1  to RF transceiver  663 - 1  to enable the input of the newly received data or the output of the previously stored data. A second command and/or address issued via controller section  610 - 1  may direct that the switch  661 - 1  of the circuitry associated with I/O line  618 - 1  be closed to connect (e.g., couple) channel  605 - 1  with controller section  610 - 1 , while disconnecting RF transceiver  663 - 1 , to enable the retrieval of the previously stored data and enable the performance of the particular functionality by the controller section  610 - 1 . Other controller sections, I/O lines, channels, switches, and/or RF transceivers (e.g., as shown at  610 -N−1,  618 -N,  505 -N,  661 -N, and/or  663 -N−1, respectively) may operate similarly. 
     Accordingly, the processing resource  608 , which includes controller sections  610 - 1 , . . . ,  610 -N−1, may be selectably coupled to a plurality of switches  661 - 1 , . . . ,  661 -N for a corresponding plurality of channels  605 - 1 , . . . ,  605 -N of a memory resource. The controller sections may be configured to select, responsive to selective activation of a particular switch, which particular channel is enabled to transmit, via a RF transceiver  663 - 1 , . . . ,  663 -N−1 selectably coupled to the particular channel, data stored in memory of the particular channel responsive to a request received from a second processing resource coupled to the second memory resource. The controller sections may be further configured to receive, via the RF transceiver selectably coupled to the particular channel, data from the second memory resource to be stored in the memory of the particular channel responsive to a request transmitted by the processing resource  608 . 
     Controller section  610 - 2  of processing resource  608  may be selectably coupled to RF transceiver  663 - 2  to issue (e.g., transmit) a request to other processing resources (e.g., second processing resource  208 - 2 ) for formation of a memory pool to wirelessly share data. The request may, in a number of embodiments, be for data that corresponds to a particular functionality having data already stored by appropriate memory devices and/or appropriate rows of a memory device selectably coupled to channel  605 - 1 . Upon receiving a response from at least one other processing resource (e.g., second processing resource  208 - 2 ) that such data is stored and/or is available at a particular address in a memory resource (e.g., second memory resource  201 - 2 ), the processing resource  608  may issue a command and/or address via controller section  610 - 2  for formation of the memory pool and/or access to the data to be wirelessly shared. Other controller sections and/or RF transceivers (e.g., as shown at  610 -N and/or  663 -N, respectively) may operate similarly. 
     In number of embodiments, a first memory resource (e.g.,  201 - 4 ) may be coupled to a first processing resource  208 - 4  at a vehicle (e.g., one or more vehicles from among the plurality of unitary vehicles  331  and/or the plurality of transport vehicles  333  shown in  FIG.  3   ). A second memory resource (e.g.,  201 - 1 ) may be coupled to a second processing resource (e.g.,  208 - 1 ) of an entity (e.g., including a transceiver resource  220 - 1 ) in a stationary (e.g., fixed) radio access network (RAN). The stationary RAN may utilize certain 3GPP-developed protocols, although embodiments are not so limited. A base station  325  may be coupled to the second processing resource  208 - 1  of the stationary RAN and in wireless communication with the vehicle. The first memory resource  201 - 4 , the second memory resource  201 - 1 , and the base station  325  may be configured to enable formation of a memory pool between the first memory resource and the second memory resource responsive to a request to access the second memory resource via the base station  325 . The first processing resource  208 - 4  or the second processing resource  208 - 1 , or both, may be configured to determine availability of either the first memory resource  201 - 4  or the second memory resource  201 - 1  based upon a workload being performed in a particular time period by the first memory resource or the second memory resource, or both. 
     A controller  110  may be configured to contribute to formation, by being wirelessly coupled to the base station  325 , of the memory pool to share data responsive to determination that the data stored by an available second memory resource  201 - 1  corresponds to data stored by an available first memory resource  201 - 4 . The controller  110  may be further configured to contribute to transmission, via the wirelessly coupled base station  325 , of the data from the available second memory resource  201 - 1  to a corresponding first memory resource  201 - 4 . The data transmitted, via the wirelessly coupled base station  325 , from the available second memory resource  201 - 1  may be stored by the corresponding first memory resource  201 - 4 . 
     The first processing resource  208 - 4  or the second processing resource  208 - 1  may be selectably coupled to a plurality of switches (e.g.,  661 - 1 , . . . ,  661 -N) for a corresponding plurality of channels (e.g.,  605 - 1 , . . . ,  605 -N) of the respective first memory resource  201 - 4  or the respective second memory resource  201 - 1 . The controller  110  may be configured to select, responsive to selective activation of a particular switch, which particular channel is enabled to transmit, via the RAN selectably coupled to the particular channel, data stored in memory of the particular channel responsive to a request received, via the base station  325 , from the first processing resource  208 - 4  or the second processing resource  208 - 1 . The controller  110  may be further configured to select, responsive to selective activation of a particular switch, which particular channel is enabled to receive, via the RAN selectably coupled to the particular channel, data from the second memory resource  201 - 1  to be stored in the memory of the particular channel responsive to the request transmitted from the first processing resource  208 - 4  or data from the first memory resource  201 - 4  to be stored in the memory of the particular channel responsive to the request transmitted from the second processing resource  208 - 1 . 
     The first processing resource  208 - 4  may be selectably wirelessly coupled to the RAN, which may be configured to transmit the request for data via the coupled base station  325 . The request may be to receive the data from at least one second memory resource (e.g., one or more memory resources corresponding to a respective one or more base stations), the data corresponding to a particular functionality having instructions for performance thereof stored in memory of a corresponding particular channel of the first memory resource  201 - 1 . Performance of the particular functionality may be different following access of stored instructions, including data received from the at least one second memory resource via the coupled base station, relative to instructions previously stored in the memory of the particular channel. 
     In a number of embodiments, a first memory resource (e.g., memory resource  201 - 1 ) may be configured to wirelessly share data and a second memory resource (e.g., memory resource  201 - 2 ) may be configured to wirelessly share data. A base station  325  may be wirelessly couplable to the first memory resource  201 - 1  and the second memory resource  201 - 2  to enable the data to be wirelessly shared. 
     In a number of embodiments, a wireless base station  325  may be coupled to a first processing resource  208 - 1  coupled to a first memory resource  201 - 1 . A second memory resource (e.g.,  201 - 4 ) may be coupled to a second processing resource (e.g.,  208 - 4 ) at at least one vehicle, as described herein. The first memory resource  201 - 1  is separate from the second memory resource  201 - 4  and each are configured to wirelessly share data between the first memory resource and the second memory resource via their respective processing resources. The at least one vehicle may be one or more vehicles selected from among the unitary vehicles  331  and/or the transport vehicles  333  described in connection with  FIG.  3    and elsewhere herein. 
     Pooling of the second memory resource  201 - 4  of a vehicle with a first memory resource  201 - 1  may be performed via at least one wireless base station  325 . For example, the second memory resource  201 - 4  may be pooled with one first memory resource  201 - 1  at a time via one wireless base station  325  or may be pooled with more than one first memory resource  201 - 1  at a time via a corresponding plurality of wireless base stations  325  (e.g., dependent upon geographical positioning of the vehicle with reference to one or more wireless base stations). In addition, the second memory resource  201 - 4  may be pooled with one or more first memory resources  201 - 1  at a time a in a sequence of such memory pools as the vehicle upon which the second memory resource  201 - 4  is positioned and/or formed transits through various geographical areas corresponding to, for example, access point and/or cloud coverage ranges. 
     A combination component (e.g., as shown in  FIG.  1    at  112  in controller  110 ) may be configured to assess resource availability of the first memory resource and the second memory resource via a wirelessly coupled base station to determine whether to enable a combination thereof to wirelessly share data. The availability of either the first memory resource or the second memory resource may be determinable based upon determination of a workload being performed at a particular point in time and/or in a particular time period by the first memory resource and/or the second memory resource. 
     For example, the first memory resource may be available at a particular point in time when the first memory resource and/or the corresponding processing resource is not being utilized for performing a particular operation (e.g., involved with forming a memory pool and/or enabling performance of a particular functionality). Similarly, the second memory resource may be available at a particular point in time when the second memory resource and/or the corresponding processing resource is not being utilized for performing a particular operation. The combination component  112  may be further configured to contribute to formation, by being wirelessly coupled to the base station  325 , of the memory pool to share the data responsive to determination that the data stored by an available second memory resource  201 - 2  corresponds to data stored by an available first memory resource  201 - 1  (e.g., for the particular functionality). 
     The combination component  112  may, in a number of embodiments, be further configured to determine that data stored by an available second memory resource  201 - 2  is capable of enabling performance of an operation by the first memory resource  201 - 1  that is different from an operation performable based upon data stored by the first memory resource  201 - 1  prior to enablement via the wirelessly coupled base station  325  of a memory pool between the first memory resource and the available second memory resource. The combination component  112  may be further configured to contribute to transmission, via the wirelessly coupled base station  325 , of the data from the available second memory resource  201 - 2  to a corresponding first memory resource  201 - 1 . The data transmitted, via the wirelessly coupled base station  325 , from the available second memory resource  201 - 2  may be stored by the corresponding first memory resource  201 - 1 . 
     A first processing resource (e.g.,  208 - 1  or  608 ), which includes the controller (e.g., as shown at  110  and/or  510 - 2 ), may be selectably coupled to a transceiver resource (e.g., as shown at  663 - 2 ) configured to transmit a request for the wirelessly shared data via the wirelessly coupled base station  325 . The request may be to receive data from at least one second memory resource  201 - 2 , where the data may correspond to a particular functionality having instructions for performance thereof stored in memory of a corresponding particular channel (e.g., as shown at  105 - 1  and/or  605 - 1 ) of the first memory resource  201 - 1 . Performance of the particular functionality may be different following access of instructions stored by the first memory resource  101 - 1 , including the data received from the at least one second memory resource  201 - 2  via the wirelessly coupled base station  325 , relative to instructions previously stored in the memory of the particular channel. 
     As described herein, the first memory resource  201 - 1 , coupled to the first processing resource  208 - 2 , and the second memory resource  201 - 2 , coupled to the second processing resource  208 - 2 , each may be configured to wirelessly share data. In a number of embodiments, the second memory resource  201 - 2  may be separate from the first memory resource  201 - 1  (e.g., by being formed and/or positioned on different vehicles, as described herein). A base station  325  wirelessly couplable to the first memory resource  201 - 1  and the second memory resource  201 - 2  may be configured to wirelessly share the data between the second memory resource and the first memory resource. 
     An arbiter component (e.g., as shown in  FIG.  1    at  114  in controller  110 ) coupled to the base station  325  and may be configured to selectably determine whether the first memory resource  201 - 1  and the second memory resource  201 - 2  are authorized to enable formation of a memory pool to wirelessly share the data. As such, the arbiter component  114  may be configured to determine enablement of the memory pool between the first memory resource  201 - 1  and the second memory resource  201 - 2  responsive to a request for the wirelessly shared data received by the wirelessly coupled base station from either the first processing resource or the second processing resource. 
     A particular number of memory resources, from a plurality of potential memory resources, included in the memory pool may, in a number of embodiments, be selectably scalable responsive to a corresponding number of memory resources authorized by the arbiter component  114 . A bandwidth of the memory pool may be selectably scalable by a particular number of memory resources authorized, by the arbiter component  114 , to be included in the memory pool. A particular number of memory resources, from a plurality of potential memory resources, included in the memory pool may be dynamically determined responsive to a number of memory resources mutually present within a particular proximity of the base station in a particular time period. A particular number of memory resources, from a plurality of potential memory resources, included in the memory pool may be dynamically determined responsive to a number of memory resources authorized, by the arbiter component  114 , as a match in a particular time period with an authorization criterion. 
     The match may, in a number of embodiments, be determined, by the arbiter component  114 , as a match with at least one authorization criterion. For example, a plurality of authorization criteria (e.g., as shown in table  770  illustrated in  FIG.  7   ) may be usable by the arbiter component  114  to selectably determine whether the first memory resource  201 - 1  and the second memory resource  201 - 2  are authorized to be included in the memory pool. As such, the match with the authorization criterion may be a match with at least one of: a particular proximity of the first memory resource and the second memory resource relative to the base station, as shown at  771 , where the particular proximity may be either a stable proximity (e.g., a distance relative to other vehicles and/or the base station, among other possibilities) or a proximity that is dynamically adjustable responsive to a determined density of memory resources (e.g., as described in connection with  FIGS.  3  and  4   ); a timing of the request for the wirelessly shared data, as shown at  772 , where the timing may correspond to a time of day and the authorization may be dynamically adjustable responsive to a determined density of memory resources at that time of day (e.g., higher density in rush hour may increase or reduce the number of resources authorized to be included in the memory pool); and/or a match of a protocol for wireless communication between a first transceiver resource coupled to the first memory resource, a second transceiver resource coupled to the second memory resource, and the base station (e.g., a match of proprietary encryption for an organization, a particular wireless fidelity (WiFi) protocol, and/or a protocol requiring a matched keyword with which a particular fraction of potential unitary vehicles and/or transport vehicles are associated). As such, in a number of embodiments, the particular number of the plurality of memory resources included in the memory pool may correspond to a corresponding number of authorized vehicles, which in a number of embodiments may each be automated, and the base station. 
     An operating mode component (e.g., as shown in  FIG.  1    at  116  in controller  110 ) may be coupled to a processing resource  108  for each memory resource  101  included in the memory pool. For example, a first operating mode component  116 - 1  may be coupled to a first processing resource  108 - 1  for a first memory resource  101 - 1 . The first operating mode component  116 - 1  may be configured to determine a particular number of a plurality of second memory resources  201 - 2  included in the memory pool. The first operating mode component  116 - 1  may be further configured to direct an operating mode component  116 - 2  coupled to each second processing resource  208 - 2  for the plurality of second memory resources  201 - 2  to modulate operating parameters for access and/or transmission of data from a number of memory devices  103  in the second memory resources  201 - 2  to correspond to the determined particular number of the plurality of second memory resources  201 - 2 . For example, burst length of data allowed to be transmitted from the second memory resources  201 - 2  may, in a number of embodiments, be modulated to be shorter and/or cache prefetch operations may be modulated to be increased to correspond with a higher number of second memory resources  201 - 2  in the memory pool, among modulation of other possible operating parameters. 
       FIG.  8    is a flow chart illustrating an example of a method  880  for formation of a memory pool between selected wirelessly utilizable memory resources, via a base station, implemented on a corresponding number of vehicles in accordance with a number of embodiments of the present disclosure. Unless explicitly stated, elements of methods described herein are not constrained to a particular order or sequence. Additionally, a number of the method embodiments, or elements thereof, described herein may be performed at the same, or at substantially the same, point in time. 
     At block  881 , the method  880  may, in a number of embodiments, include transmitting, via a base station  325  coupled to a first processing resource  208 - 1  coupled to a first memory resource  201 - 1 , a request for data stored by a second memory resource (e.g.,  201 - 2 , . . . ,  201 - 5 ) at a vehicle (e.g., an automated vehicle) to contribute to processing of a mission profile stored by the first memory resource  201 - 1 . In various embodiments, a particular number of a plurality of second memory resources may be positioned and/or formed on a corresponding number of a plurality of vehicles (e.g., as described in connection with  FIGS.  1 - 7   ). 
     At block  882 , the method  880  may, in a number of embodiments, include receiving, via the base station in response to the request, the data from the second memory resource to contribute to the processing of the mission profile (e.g., as shown at  117  and described in connection with  FIG.  1   ). Performing the mission profile may be based at least in part on processing of stored instructions at the first memory resource and the data transmitted from the vehicle. 
     In a number of embodiments, forming a memory pool may include the first memory resource  201 - 1  and the base station  325  positioned at a fixed (e.g., stationary) access point, the second memory resource (e.g.,  201 - 2 ) at the vehicle, and one or more additional memory resources (e.g.,  201 - 3 ,  201 - 4 , and/or  201 - 5 , among possible others) at one or more respective vehicles. Data may be wirelessly accessed from each of the additional memory resources to contribute to the processing of the mission profile. For example, in various embodiments, the data from the additional memory resources may be utilized in addition to the data from the first memory resource  201 - 1  and the second memory resource (e.g.,  201 - 2 ) or just the data from the additional memory resources may be utilized to contribute to the processing of the mission profile. 
     The memory pool may be formed responsive to determination that data stored by the second memory resource  201 - 2  is capable of enabling improved elapsed time or safety of performance of at least a portion of a mission profile previously stored by the first memory resource  201 - 1 . Determining that data available from the second memory resource  201 - 2  is capable of enabling the improved elapsed time or safety of the performance may be based on a determination that the second memory resource stores data representing at least one of mapping, imaging, or classifying, or any combination thereof, of objects associated with an intended transit route of the previously stored mission profile. Hence, the memory pool may be formed to wirelessly transmit, from the second memory resource  201 - 2  to the first memory resource  201 - 1 , at least one of correspondingly mapped, imaged, or classified data, or any combination thereof, to enable processing of an improved mission profile relative to the previously stored mission profile. 
     Alternatively or in addition, a method may, in a number of embodiments, include transmitting, via a vehicle (e.g., an automated vehicle) coupled to a first processing resource (e.g.,  208 - 2 ) coupled to a first memory resource (e.g.,  201 - 2 ), a request for data stored by a second memory resource  201 - 1  at a base station  315  to contribute to processing of a mission profile stored by the first memory resource  201 - 2 . Such a method may further include receiving, via the vehicle in response to the request, the data from the second memory resource to contribute to the processing of the mission profile. A memory pool may be formed as such to include the first memory resource  201 - 2  at the vehicle and the second memory resource  201 - 1  and the base station  325  at a fixed access point. 
     The request may, in a number of embodiments, be wirelessly transmitted, via a selectably coupled base station  325 , by a first processing resource  208 - 2  coupled to a first memory resource  201 - 2  positioned on a first automated vehicle, where the request is for data to contribute to processing of a mission profile stored by the first memory resource. A response may be wirelessly transmitted, via the selectably coupled base station, by a second processing resource  208 - 3  coupled to a second memory resource  201 - 3  on a second automated vehicle to enable formation of a memory pool to transmit the data to contribute to the processing of the mission profile. The response may, in a number of embodiments, be transmitted from a base station that is different from a base station from which the request was sent. 
     The mission profile may be performed based at least in part on processing of stored instructions at the first memory resource  201 - 2  and the data transmitted from the second memory resource  201 - 1 . The memory pool may be formed responsive to determination that data stored by the second memory resource  201 - 1  is capable of enabling improved elapsed time or safety of performance of at least a portion of the mission profile previously stored by the first memory resource  201 - 2  at the vehicle. 
     In a number of embodiments, the method may further include forming, by being wirelessly coupled to the base station, the memory pool to include more than two of the plurality of memory resources to transmit the data to contribute to the processing of the mission profile (e.g., as many resources as are authorized by the arbiter component  114  described in connection with  FIGS.  1  and  6 - 7   ). The method may further include performing the mission profile differently based upon processing of stored instructions, including the data transmitted from the base station, relative to instructions stored by the mission profile prior to storage of the transmitted data. For example, the method may further include forming the memory pool responsive to determination that data available from the second memory resource or the base station may be capable of enabling improved elapsed time and/or safety of performance of at least a portion of a previously stored mission profile. 
     The improved elapsed time and/or safety of performance of the previously stored mission profile may, in a number of embodiments, be based upon determination that the second memory resource or the base station stores data representing at least one of mapping, imaging, and/or classifying of objects associated with (e.g., vehicles, road construction, and/or other movable or inanimate objects that potentially affect time and/or safety) an intended transit route of the previously stored mission profile. Upon such a determination, the memory pool may be formed to transmit, via the wirelessly coupled base station, at least one of the correspondingly mapped, imaged, and/or classified data to enable processing of an improved mission profile relative to the previously stored mission profile. 
     In the above detailed description of the present disclosure, reference is made to the accompanying drawings that form a part hereof, and in which is shown by way of illustration how one or more embodiments of the disclosure may be practiced. These embodiments are described in sufficient detail to enable those of ordinary skill in the art to practice the embodiments of this disclosure, and it is to be understood that other embodiments may be utilized and that process, electrical, and structural changes may be made without departing from the scope of the present disclosure. 
     As used herein, particularly with respect to the drawings, reference numbers with hyphenated digits and/or designators such as “X”, “Y”, “N”, “M”, etc., (e.g.,  103 - 1 ,  103 - 2 ,  103 - 3 , and  103 -N in  FIG.  1   ) indicate that a plurality of the particular feature so designated may be included. Moreover, when just the first three digits are utilized (e.g.,  103 ) without the hyphenation, the digits are presented to generally represent, in some embodiments, all of the plurality of the particular feature. 
     It is also to be understood that the terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only, and is not intended to be limiting. As used herein, the singular forms “a”, “an”, and “the” include singular and plural referents, unless the context clearly dictates otherwise, as do “a number of”, “at least one”, and “one or more” (e.g., a number of memory arrays may refer to one or more memory arrays), whereas a “plurality of” is intended to refer to more than one of such things. Furthermore, the words “can” and “may” are used throughout this application in a permissive sense (i.e., having the potential to, being able to), not in a mandatory sense (i.e., must). The term “include,” and derivations thereof, means “including, but not limited to”. The terms “coupled” and “coupling” mean to be directly or indirectly connected physically for access to and/or for movement (transmission) of instructions (e.g., control signals, address signals, etc.) and data, as appropriate to the context. The terms “data” and “data values” are used interchangeably herein and may have the same meaning, as appropriate to the context (e.g., one or more data units or “bits”). 
     While example embodiments including various combinations and configurations of memory resources, processing resources, transceiver resources, memory devices, controllers, mission profiles, unitary vehicles, transport vehicles, base stations, infrastructure, and switches, among other components for formation of a memory pool between selected memory resources have been illustrated and described herein, embodiments of the present disclosure are not limited to those combinations explicitly recited herein. Other combinations and configurations of the memory resources, processing resources, transceiver resources, memory devices, controllers, mission profiles, unitary vehicles, transport vehicles, base stations, infrastructure, and switches for formation of a memory pool between selected memory resources disclosed herein are expressly included within the scope of this disclosure. 
     Although specific embodiments have been illustrated and described herein, those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that an arrangement calculated to achieve the same results may be substituted for the specific embodiments shown. This disclosure is intended to cover adaptations or variations of one or more embodiments of the present disclosure. It is to be understood that the above description has been made in an illustrative fashion, and not a restrictive one. Combination of the above embodiments, and other embodiments not specifically described herein will be apparent to those of skill in the art upon reviewing the above description. The scope of the one or more embodiments of the present disclosure includes other applications in which the above structures and processes are used. Therefore, the scope of one or more embodiments of the present disclosure should be determined with reference to the appended claims, along with the full range of equivalents to which such claims are entitled. 
     In the foregoing Detailed Description, some features are grouped together in a single embodiment for the purpose of streamlining the disclosure. This method of disclosure is not to be interpreted as reflecting an intention that the disclosed embodiments of the present disclosure have to use more features than are expressly recited in each claim. Rather, as the following claims reflect, inventive subject matter lies in less than all features of a single disclosed embodiment. Thus, the following claims are hereby incorporated into the Detailed Description, with each claim standing on its own as a separate embodiment.