Hold on to Your Hardware
6 hours ago
- #hardware-shortage
- #data-center-demand
- #consumer-tech
- The golden age of affordable and upgradable consumer hardware is ending due to a structural shift in the industry.
- RAM and SSD prices are skyrocketing due to high demand from data centers and AI companies, leading to shortages and price hikes.
- Major manufacturers like Micron are exiting the consumer market, leaving a duopoly of Samsung and SK Hynix, which reduces competition and increases prices.
- Data centers and hyperscalers are consuming a significant portion of global memory production, leaving little for consumers.
- Consumer hardware is becoming more expensive and less upgradable, with components like LPDDR memory being soldered onto devices.
- Companies like Western Digital and Kioxia have sold out their entire production capacity for years to enterprise clients, leaving consumers with limited options.
- The shortage is affecting gaming consoles, laptops, and even educational devices like the Raspberry Pi, which has seen a 70% price increase.
- The industry is shifting towards subscription models, where consumers rent hardware instead of owning it, potentially eroding digital sovereignty.
- Geopolitical factors, such as export controls and chip bans, are further restricting access to hardware, making ownership a luxury.
- Chinese manufacturers CXMT and YMTC are expanding production, offering some hope for breaking the current supply stranglehold, but geopolitical restrictions may limit their impact.
- Consumers are advised to maintain and upgrade their existing hardware wisely, as replacement may become unaffordable or impossible in the future.