Price / GB of DRAM hasn't actually fallen much in the 10 years of progression.[1] LPDDR is still over $3/GB. UDIMM is still ~$3 /GB, which is about the same in 2010 / 2011. i.e Despite what you may heard about DRAM price collapse in 2019, the price floor of DRAM has been pretty much the same over the past 10 years.
Every other silicon has gotten cheaper, NAND, ICs, just not DRAM. And yet our need for DRAM is forever increasing. From In-Memory Datastore on Servers to Mobile Phones with Camera shooting rapid 4K images.
Compared to NAND, or Foundry like TSMC, there are clear roadmaps where cost is heading, and what cost reduction we could expect in the next 5 years, along with other outlook. There is nothing of sort in DRAM. At least I dont see anything to suggest we could see $2/GB DRAM, if not even lower. I dont see how EUV is going help either, there won't even be enough EUV TwinScan machines going around for Foundries in the next 3 years, let alone NAND and DRAM.
The only good news is the low / normal capacity ECC DRAM has finally fallen to ~$5/GB. ( They used to be $10-20/ GB ).
I would not be surprised at all if it were to come out that Samsung, Micron, and other major players are price-fixing just like they have been caught doing multiple times in the past. They seem to pay their fines as a cost of doing business and then continue to operate like a cartel. Seems this is the same situation, and I don't doubt this is directly responsible for inflated DRAM pricing.
It is easy. For example you could hire 10000 people to perform calculations for your complex mathematical model (like it was done century ago) or you can buy Raspberry PI to perform the same task in no time. Which will be cheaper?
This is a bad comparison. DRAM margins are razor thin and unlike transistors, DRAM has not gotten much smaller, which is the main cost savings gained from process improvements.
Instead, server and accelerator vendors want ever faster and higher performance DRAM, and so these performance gains trickle down to consumers, but nothing is driving price down.
People on here literally think Moore's is a natural law and if computer hardware isn't getting 15% cheaper every year there must be funny business involved...
They have.
Giving the industry the benefit of the doubt after decades of price fixing is generous at best.
“To date, five manufacturers have pleaded guilty to their involvement in an international price-fixing conspiracy including Hynix, Infineon, Micron Technology, Samsung, and Elpida.”
It’s claimed to be a very high margin industry and supply is artificially constrained to maintain that margin.
I call it the economic fallacy. It's very common, especially on discussion forums like this.
Every problem is only related to how much competition there is, but not to how hard the underlying problem is.
It's somewhat related to the "awareness fallacy": The belief that every problem that humanity has can be solved if just everyone is aware and willing to act.
>DRAM margins are razor thin and unlike transistors, DRAM has not gotten much smaller, which is the main cost savings gained from process improvements.
Should we then expect SRAM to eventually be cheaper than DRAM?
In the end price discovery is supply/demand, and it appears investment in DRAM manufacturing is focused on improving RAM performance, and just keeping up with demand, not outpacing it.
Since the barrier to entry is very high, there's not so much pressure to compete further on price.
While it's true that the market ultimately determines pricing, the fact that manufacturers can stuff larger amounts of RAM into the newer equivalent SKUs means the price per GB for fast memory would still be driven down. This is even possible if new unit prices are higher, i.e. if this year's "entry-level" SKU costs a little more than last year's but now has more capacity.
The thing that's gotten smaller is the minimum feature size on a silicon wafer. The same types of etching and doping processes can be used to create many integrated circuits.
DRAM chips are integrated circuts that consist of individual transistors and capacitors for each bit, plus the wiring and logic to read, refresh, and write to those bits. They're substantially transistors.
It's true that logic, power, analog, flash, DRAM, SRAM, and mixed signal ICs do have some significant differences, and some manufacturers optimize for a subset of those capabilities, but they're similar enough that if one industry advances leaps and bounds (like Flash storage and low-power processing have).
> The thing that's gotten smaller is the minimum feature size on a silicon wafer.
No, even minimum feature size is improving much slower than in the past. Fabs are focusing on specifics that are still giving gain: lower power transistors, SRAM. Really high performance transistors like for amps have not gotten much smaller, DRAM has not gotten much smaller, analog has not gotten much smaller.
The capacitors and sense amplifiers in DRAM have not gotten smaller nearly as fast as any of the other features.
> DRAM chips are integrated circuts that consist of individual transistors and capacitors for each bit, plus the wiring and logic to read, refresh, and write to those bits.
That’s a very satisfying answer. I’m aware that the processes for logic, flash, and DRAM have some significant differences but I don’t know much more than “differences exist” (e.g. and therefore you have a different die for CPU and flash).
My reasoning is, at best, “SSDs have gotten cheaper, SSDs are kind of like RAM, shouldn’t RAM get cheaper?” and I know that’s not exactly an expert opinion.
SSDs are non-volatile — they don’t need power and constant refreshing like DRAM does. So you can do different things based on a different heat and power budget, like going 3D and adding more layers that would kill regular ram or a cpu, etc.
Price / GB of DRAM hasn't actually fallen much in the 10 years of progression.[1] LPDDR is still over $3/GB. UDIMM is still ~$3 /GB, which is about the same in 2010 / 2011. i.e Despite what you may heard about DRAM price collapse in 2019, the price floor of DRAM has been pretty much the same over the past 10 years.
Every other silicon has gotten cheaper, NAND, ICs, just not DRAM. And yet our need for DRAM is forever increasing. From In-Memory Datastore on Servers to Mobile Phones with Camera shooting rapid 4K images.
Compared to NAND, or Foundry like TSMC, there are clear roadmaps where cost is heading, and what cost reduction we could expect in the next 5 years, along with other outlook. There is nothing of sort in DRAM. At least I dont see anything to suggest we could see $2/GB DRAM, if not even lower. I dont see how EUV is going help either, there won't even be enough EUV TwinScan machines going around for Foundries in the next 3 years, let alone NAND and DRAM.
The only good news is the low / normal capacity ECC DRAM has finally fallen to ~$5/GB. ( They used to be $10-20/ GB ).
[1] https://secureservercdn.net/166.62.107.55/ff6.d53.myftpuploa...