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Sharky Extreme : Memory Pricing Guide |
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Memory Pricing Guide |
High-End Memory Prices - Week of August 6, 2007 - Page 6By SharkyExtreme.com Staff August 7, 2007
Intel has a long history of jumping on the bandwagon of emerging memory technologies, with both success and failure. With the Intel P35 and G33 chipsets, the chip giant has formally adopted high-speed DDR3 memory in the 1066 to 1333 MHz range. This is an interesting move, and one accelerated by AMD and their powerful integrated memory controller. AMD is not making the move to DDR3 with their next-generation Phenom platform, so at the least for the foreseeable future, this market will Intel-only. Due to this, there are few DDR3 modules on the open market, with vast majority from memory giants Corsair and Kingston. The most popular DDR3 configurations are single 1GB modules or 2x1GB matched pair kits, and DDR3 clock speeds range from 1066 MHz to 1375 MHz. We continue to add new DDR3 listings to the chart, supplementing the list by three members this week, but the overall numbers still lag the others by a significant margin. Still, there is noticeable pricing activity in the chart this week, with five price drops hitting double digits. These included the Super Talent DDR3-1333 2x1GB (-$35), Kingston Value DDR3-1066 1GB (-$19) and Kingston HyperX DDR3-1375 2x1GB (-$19) listings, while only a single price increase hit similar heights - the price of Kingston Value DDR3-1066 2x1GB jumped by $14. Overall DDR3 chart trends still showed positive movement, as the listings fell by an aggregate total of $84.
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