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Makes me think I should hold onto what I have instead of downgrading to DDR4 systems...Memory prices could leap even higher as the supply of helium, crucial to making chips, is now impacted by the conflict in the Middle East
https://www.pcgamer.com/hardware/me...w-impacted-by-the-conflict-in-the-middle-east
Why is there no dislike button. lolNo one gives a shit about intel.
why notNo one gives a shit about intel.
lolNo one gives a shit about intel.
13900k screwing and i was one of them and for months was wondering and dealing with crash after crash after crash when trying to play any game or do any video encoding. Gaming is meh (last time i checked) and nothing beats V-cache...The fact that with a amd board you can upgrade for years.why not
LoLNo one gives a shit about intel.
Damn, way to get lucky! Also, no luck trying to recreate it, lol."Shopper scores $1,000 in PC hardware for just $86 in a shocking pricing glitch — Newegg shrugs off massive loss and responds with a thumbs-up emoji
The spoils include a Ryzen 5 7600X CPU, B850 motherboard, 32GB DDR5-6000 RAM, and a 240mm AIO liquid cooler."
https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-com...sive-loss-and-responds-with-a-thumbs-up-emoji
View attachment 791415
Intel is the elephant in the room. As much as everyone wants to believe that Intel has somehow died and crawled under a rock, they are still majority market share of most things CPU. Intel's Lunar Lake is being bought up like crazy because they come with the ram built in and prices have yet to effect them in any major way. So of course, PC manufacturers have been sticking them into their laptops. Then you have ZAM which could put Intel in a permanent position to ignore any industry ram pricing fluctuations. There's no discussion about computing without Intel.No one gives a shit about intel.
I like that they're doing something like this, but I'm wondering why not 2 DDR4 slots and 2 DDR5 slots?"ASRock launches new Frankensteined motherboard with one DDR4 slot and two DDR5 slots — Intel board signals the RAM apocalypse is truly nigh
Is the cure to RAM pricing a motherboard that supports multiple generations?
The ongoing RAMpocalypse has led many to think of creative solutions to acquire memory at reasonable prices. ASRock, a leading motherboard manufacturer, has chimed in with its answer: a motherboard that supports both DDR4 and DDR5, so you can simply pick whatever's cheapest. The "H610M Combo II" is an LGA 1700 board, meaning it supports Intel's 12th, 13th, and 14th Gen CPUs.
This is actually the company's second motherboard of this nature. We previously saw the H610 Combo, which was a full-size ATX option, and it was more feature-rich. For instance, that board had 6 DIMM slots, while this one is limited to just three. Out of those three, two are meant for DDR5, while the one closest to the CPU is DDR4. The DDR4 slot can take up to a single 32 GB stick and maxes out at 3,200 MT/s."
View attachment 791459
https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-com...oard-signals-the-ram-apocalypse-is-truly-nigh
At least $1.5 Trillion invested in AI, most likely more. Stores raise RAM prices, consumers aren't buying, stock isn't dried up, yet prices aren't lowering. This means that they expect another AI round of RAM buying to happen again. If that doesn't happen, less RAM gets manufactured since there's "less demand" for RAM, prices stay high. Sounds like an artificial shortage to me.“The memory stock cycle of boom-bust-repeat is over, executives say
View attachment 791585
Kristina Partsinevelos
KEY POINTS
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/11/memory-stocks-ai-chips-demand.html
- Memory stocks are soaring, and executives say that AI has upended the industry’s old boom-bust cycle.
- Hyperscalers are more keen on signing long-term deals to lock in supply for years.
- Memory prices have surged as AI chipmakers snap up supply over the makers of consumer goods like laptops and phones.“
At least $1.5 Trillion invested in AI, most likely more. Stores raise RAM prices, consumers aren't buying, stock isn't dried up, yet prices aren't lowering. This means that they expect another AI round of RAM buying to happen again. If that doesn't happen, less RAM gets manufactured since there's "less demand" for RAM, prices stay high. Sounds like an artificial shortage to me.
It's a lot like the truck dealership prices in the U.S., prices are historically high. Inventory at dealerships are high, because they keep the prices high, and hardly anyone is buying. Once this happened, there's a surplus of new trucks that haven't reached dealerships, but since the previous year's trucks aren't selling, manufacturers are now producing less trucks, which creates more demand, which will now keep the prices high. Only when the bubble bursts will truck prices go back to normal.
sounds like an organized plot and scheme to fix prices againThe difference, in this case, is that manufacturers are hesitant to expand supply to meet the demand because they're concerned about the crash. So, the flip side is that all the data centres won't actually be operational. The buildings will be ready but they won't have memory or video cards to populate them all. That means that the big return on investment from those massive data centres won't happen because they'll be running at lower capacity than expected. So if supply increases to match demand it'll eventually lead to a crash in prices. If it doesn't increase then the data centres will sit partially empty waiting for supply. Either way, it won't be pretty. Couple that with the power problems and how long it takes to bring that online and you're looking at a perfect storm that all these promises made to investors won't actually hit their mark. It may be for power reasons, RAM reasons, hard drive reasons, CPU reasons, or any of a host of other issues. If investors see that their investment is not leading to that big data centre and its promises of revenue then they pull their money. Some companies will be fine, even if they take a hit (Google, Meta, Amazon, etc) but others will crash and demand will slow accordingly. I don't think you'll see a RAM or memory price crash but it will start coming down when the promises don't meet reality.
Maybe they need artificial intelligence to predict actual demand. lolsounds like an organized plot and scheme to fix prices again
Possibly, but only if there is collusion between companies. Nothing says companies half to expand their manufacturing base.sounds like an organized plot and scheme to fix prices again
They've done it so many times at this point I figure it's modus operandi. Not like they're punished in any meaningful way for it.sounds like an organized plot and scheme to fix prices again
sounds like an organized plot and scheme to fix prices again
might be, need access to all their chats, emails, call transcripts etcBorderline. They're all working from the same playbook (fear of excess supply) so their decisions all match. I'm not convinced there was an actual phone call to agree not to expand supply. I'm sure if one of them flinched and started to build out supply then the others would follow because they don't want to be the one not being able to meet supply.