• Silver Needle@lemmy.ca
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    59 minutes ago

    And they told me I was crazy for putting 64 gigs into my machine back in early 2021. I “only” paid about 200 USD

  • HertzDentalBar@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    47 minutes ago

    Going to be fucking hilarious when all the western companies get fucked by China taking over the market they don’t seem to care about.

  • nightlily@leminal.space
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    49 minutes ago

    I‘m switching hobbies to gunpla. No one has managed to put DRAM in an airbrush to the best of my knowledge.

  • Bane_Killgrind@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    17 minutes ago

    I can’t wait till these companies shutter their AI shit and that supply gets dumped back into the market

    Knowing real life some other party will juice it and ride the ram shortage for another few years, just keeping the supply as a speculative income stream.

  • rumba@lemmy.zip
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    3 hours ago

    Go ahead, make a lucrative market for consumer ram, see how fast china figures out how ot start filling that need :)

  • btsax@reddthat.com
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    2 hours ago

    I’d just point out that now might be a good time to add a whole-house surge arrester and/or get a bunch of new surge arresting power strips for your hardware. They have a useful life measured in joules dissipated so replace them if they’re old too or your cheap RAM (among other things) may let out the magic smoke one day.

  • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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    5 hours ago

    I’m aware, thanks.

    Now I’m just contemplating whether I should upgrade from 32 GB DDR4 to 64 or 128 while it’s still within the realm of possibility, or bet on memory prices coming back down within the next few years, and upgrade to an entirely new platform with DDR5 then.

    At least I’m not planning on buying a brand new car anytime soon, or even a nearly new one. And my phone’s fine for a few more years.

  • realitista@lemmus.org
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    6 hours ago

    AI’s are more important than humans now. I guess we should get used to this. Line must go up.

  • InFerNo@lemmy.ml
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    4 hours ago

    I took the plunge last month and went with 32GB 6000MT/s DDR5 in a new system. 16GB VRAM card, too.

    We’ll see if this system will hold up for as long as my old pc did, which was 10 years.

  • CADmonkey@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    My most recent hobby has been an old Suzuki Samurai that I dragged out of the woods a few years ago. It doesn’t use much RAM. It doesn’t even have fuel injection.

    I’ve also been getting back into archery with my kid.

    Honestly, the more I think about it, the more I think that making it harder to get a computer and play games is a huge miscalculation. If everyone is distracted by Call of Battle: Dutyfield then you have fewer bored assholes casting about for something to do, and if people can still play Factorio, you don’t end up with bored, autistic, organized assholes casting about for something to do.

  • melfie@lemy.lol
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    11 hours ago

    The reason RAM prices went up 4x is that a massive amount of not-yet-manufactured memory was bought with money that doesn’t really exist to be put into GPUs that haven’t been made yet, to be installed in data centers that haven’t been built, powered by infrastructure that may never exist, to satisfy demand that isn’t actually there, in order to generate profits that are mathematically impossible.

    😎

    • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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      8 hours ago

      The price crash is going to be great. Such a massive yo-yo. Most of the AI companies will just completely eat shit out of it.

      • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        6 hours ago

        Yes and no. The hardware companies have already said that they’re not interested in expanding production. They know it’s a bubble, and don’t want expanded production now to cause a glut in the future when the inevitable pop happens. So prices may not actually drop, (even after the pop), because the companies still won’t be producing more hardware than they currently are.

        My best guess is that we’ll have some dark data centers sitting around collecting dust, but the hardware they bought won’t actually flood the market and crash prices. If anything, since the US dollar’s value is essentially tied to Nvidia and OpenAI’s market share, a pop will only make the dollar less powerful and will counteract any potential drops in prices that may have otherwise happened. The companies will get a trillion dollar bailout when the pop happens, (because they’re too big to fail) then nothing will change about the current hardware prices.

        • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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          6 hours ago

          All the ram being bought up is going to end up in the 2nd hand market as the hardware is all liquidated out. The prices will crash, and despite manufacturers not increasing their productions lines to build more ram, will still have to compete against themselves from the used market, meaning they won’t be able to keep trying to charge crazy high prices.

          • foggenbooty@lemmy.world
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            3 hours ago

            The problem is it’s manufacturing capacity that is being bought. They’re going to use that capacity to build HBM modules and data centre GPUs that cannot run outside of specialized servers. There will be a lot of high end gear gathering dust, but nothing you or I can use.

            Maybe if you’re a large business/enterprise you could get some hardware on the cheap during the crash, but it’s not ot like those things are full of DDR5 DIMMs and RTX GPUs.

  • criscodisco@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    What if the unintentional consequence of hardware hoarding by AI companies is we have fewer devices being made that spy on us, like smart TVs and appliances.

    • GalacticSushi@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      7 hours ago

      The idea is that in the future your “personal computer” will be a streaming stick that you plug into a monitor to access your Microslop Copilot Windows 12 OneDrive Azure Cloud Virtual PC for $99 a month.

      • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        6 hours ago

        Yup, they’re 100% trying to shift towards cloud computing. It has already been happening with gaming, and many players have decided that they’re okay with a slightly worse experience if it means they can run their games on a potato PC. Tech companies see the blood in the water, and know that there is money to be made in cloud computing. Everything is shifting to SAAS, so it only makes sense that hardware will be a subscription next.