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Sharky Extreme : Memory Pricing Guide |
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Memory Pricing Guide |
High-End Memory Prices - Week of May 15, 2006 - Page 3By SharkyExtreme.com Staff May 15, 2006The standard desktop market for registered DDR begins and ends with the Athlon 64 FX-based platforms. This is due to its Opteron-based lineage, and the Athlon 64 FX requires registered DDR, rather than standard unbuffered DDR. It has created a market need for 400 MHz PC3200 Registered DDR, and several manufacturers have jumped in to supply this enthusiast market. Due to the lower number of available registered DDR modules, we've gone a bit outside the Top 5 manufacturers, and also listed both the single module and matched pair PC3200 DDR prices. This is still mostly a niche market for desktop buyers, so overall vendor and module choice may be limited for the near future. The Socket 939 platform and its dual-channel DDR architecture has taken charge of the AMD enthusiast market, but Socket 940 and Registered DDR remain a market influence on the desktop side, if only for platform memory upgrades. When you also factor in the various high-end workstation and small server platforms that utilize this type of memory, you realize it's not going to be dropping off the map anytime soon. The Registered DDR chart looks very good in terms of the overall price change, which dropped by a very healthy $75. But this was mostly due to a whopping $89 cut to the price of Crucial PC3200 Registered 2x1-GB. There were two other double-digit changes, as Corsair XMS PC3200LL Registered 2x512-MB fell by $15 and Kingston PC3200 Registered 512-MB increased by $20, but otherwise, prices were very stable.
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