Factbox: Life after memory chips - what's in the New Toshiba?

Japan's Toshiba Corp, presenting its plan to sustain the firm after a $6.3 billion writedown, identified a "Rebuilt Toshiba" as a maker of components and machinery that will exclude its once-core memory chips arm and problematic nuclear power business.

The following is a breakdown of Toshiba, the conglomerate behind the first mass-market laptop and whose current output is as varied as train carriages and light bulbs.

WHAT HAS TOSHIBA SOLD OVER THE PAST YEAR?

WHAT ELSE COULD IT SELL?

WHAT'S LEFT IN THE 'NEW TOSHIBA'?

The chips and nuclear businesses combined accounted for almost a third of revenue and over 70 percent of operating income in the financial year through March 2017.

Toshiba expects its rump business - which includes information technology and batteries - to earn revenue of over 4 trillion yen ($34.75 billion) and operating income of 210 billion in 2019.

Contributing about half of both will be a business domain the company dubs "Social Infrastructure," which includes:

The next biggest domain will be Energy:

Rebuilt Toshiba's third pillar will be electronic devices:

The fourth and smallest division will be information communications technology (ICT) which Toshiba said will create services such as voice and image recognition systems using artificial intelligence (AI) and the Internet of Things (IoT).

(Reporting by Tokyo Bureau; Editing by Christopher Cushing)