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Sharky Extreme : Memory Pricing Guide |
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Memory Pricing Guide |
High-End Memory Prices - Week of September 29, 2008 - Page 4By SharkyExtreme.com Staff September 30, 2008DDR has given way to DDR2, thereby allowing next-generation memory speeds of 533/667/800/1000/1066/1200 MHz and above, and Intel was the first to jump on the DDR2 bandwagon, with the 975X, P965, 955X, 945X, 925X/XE and 915P/G platforms all utilizing this high-end memory. With the release of the AM2 platform, AMD joined the DDR2 camp, and this has transformed DDR2 into the current memory standard for new system purchases. The DDR2 market continues to evolve and expand, with all of the larger vendors jumping on board. Capacities and speeds are also increasing and some innovative module designs are starting to appear. As far as the price listings go, this chart looks specifically at single-module DDR2, and keeps to the standard DDR2-667, -800, -1000, -1066, and -1200 speeds, as well as module sizes from 512-MB to 2-GB. DDR2 memory has been a real hotbed of activity through 2008, showing price drops from week to week, but this usually refers to the matched pair sector. The single-module DDR2 chart has only one significant price decrease - the G.SKILL DDR2-800 4GB module fell by $30, and the next largest one was only an $8 cut to Kingston HyperX DDR2-1066 1GB. Thankfully, we don't have to deal with much on the other end of the chart, as a $3 jump to Crucial Ballistix DDR2-1066 1GB is the largest. Due to this, the overall chart movement showed positive trends, with a total drop of $73.
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