Intel has a long history of jumping on the bandwagon of emerging memory technologies, with these jumps ending in 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 1600 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 current Phenom platform, but will for the next-generation, so this market will Intel-only in the foreseeable future. Due to this, there are still fewer DDR3 modules on the open market, with most of these coming from the major players. The most popular DDR3 configurations are single 1GB/2GB modules or 2x1GB/2x2GB matched pair kits, and DDR3 clock speeds range from 1066 MHz to 2000 MHz.
The DDR3 memory chart is where we usually find the majority of price drops, with a triple-digit chart decrease being the norm. In most ways, we're sticking to the status quo again this week, as the overall chart movement showed an aggregate drop of $312, or even better than the $205 chart decrease we posted the last time out. There were twelve double-digit price drops, including a hefty $156 sliced from the Corsair Dominator DDR3-1800 2x1GB. There was also a trio of significant price increases, the largest of which was a $37 spike to Super Talent DDR3-1800 2x1GB.