Soldato
- Joined
- 14 Jun 2004
- Posts
- 8,195
im looking at ddr4 prices and it looks like they have also started rising?
That is quite possible that it won't go back down but I honestly find myself asking what are people using all this AI for. I mean it's hardly ground breaking stuff and I don't really use it that much so where is the market....I mean ChatGPT, Copilot are okay but not earth shattering.
yes exactly, i can see this compounding that issue even further is what i was trying to say i guessddr4 is end-of-life even before the ram shortage malarkey, hence the price increases
Probably never. The days of cheap RAM have joined the days of cheap GPUs; it will now be a thing of the past.When will they come down?
Probably never. The days of cheap RAM have joined the days of cheap GPUs; it will now be a thing of the past.

Depends on events. If the AI bubble pops and demand crashes then prices will gradually fall back to where they were a few months ago. Otherwise we're probably looking at H2 2027 before enough extra capacity comes online to have any real effect on supply.When will they come down?
It's relative and depends what your comparison is. If you set it against the cost of a rig, yes, GPUs are the most expensive component. However, that doesn't change that GPUs have increased in price as the years have gone by. An ultra high end GPU is now astronomically more expensive than one from 20 years ago.XX90 Series aside - which lets face it, is a niche luxury market (just like super cars versus sports cars) GPU's have never been cheap, ever. They're the most expensive part of any build, and always have been.
Using/building/buying a PC for gaming, is a luxury, not a right.
If someone doesn't like the price, they buy a console, just like they always have done.
It is what it is with a GPU, if you want high FPS, high resolution, you pay for it, just like if you want a fast car. Neither of which you need.
Unless it's work related stuff, but then the company would pay for that, so it's irrelevant to the employee as a cost factor.
People that act sour because they 'need' to do casual video editing/rendering etc as a hobby, do it by choice, and if it's too expensive, then too bad, it's not a necessity, it's a hobby, and they're probably better off with a Mac for that anyway
Where as everything else required for a PC, such as a RAM, is required for it to function and do anything. So we need those parts, and not to be ripped off. So there is a difference when it comes to what to be angry about.

It's relative and depends what your comparison is. If you set it against the cost of a rig, yes, GPUs are the most expensive component. However, that doesn't change that GPUs have increased in price as the years have gone by. An ultra high end GPU is now astronomically more expensive than one from 20 years ago.
I paid £300 for an X1950XTX back in 2006. That's £523 today based on inflation. In reality, a mid range GPU is now circa £500 (9070/5070). GPUs have gotten expensive.
CPUs as a comparison haven't moved much at all - they've arguably gotten cheaper. An i7 920 was £290 back in 2008. That was a high-end desktop CPU at the time and quite a premium over standard desktop parts. That's £490 in today's money. You can easily pick up a 9800X/9900X or 265k for less, and they are that same above standard desktop class CPU.
With ram prices on the up maybe more people will switch over to retro gaming?
Its just bananas at this pointDepends on events. If the AI bubble pops and demand crashes then prices will gradually fall back to where they were a few months ago. Otherwise we're probably looking at H2 2027 before enough extra capacity comes online to have any real effect on supply.
GPUs have gotten more expensive. That statement is indisputably true. The days of high-end cards being £500 (in today's money) are long behind us. They have been cheap relative to what they cost now. If you are looking at the cost relative to the total % of a rig, sure, the GPU takes up most of it (and always has), but today it takes up even more. That is compounded further by other components becoming cheaper and GPUs continuously rising in price.But everything you buy in general, has increased over the years; that's more my point, so it is comparable in any era, given the cost of living, what's considered a decent wage/PH pay, etc.
Thus in X year, GPU's were still a lot of money compared to their counterparts.
So nothing has changed, was more my point.
£12 an hour used to be a well paid job, now the minimum wage is more than that.
As for the X1950XTX versus today, that's only because technology has moved so far along that we can have such a variety of performance tiers/pricing, so it can seem more reasonable with what's on offer for X price point. We didn't have that advancement nor variety back then.
CPU wise, it's a mixed bag, I had a Athlon 3200+ XP back in 2004 - Hexus review back in May 2003:
"So what's it like overall? We talked about performance on the previous page. It's not as fast as new Intel gear but neither is it slow. I hinted that you should buy a lower clocked XP instead and make this processor essentially for nearly one tenth of the price. That's pretty staggering and yes this processor will be the wrong side of £400 at launch."
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AMD Athlon XP 3200+
As a platform, we're pretty impressed. 200MHz front side bus can't hurt and the DDR memory infrastructure has long been in place to support the move. NVIDIA nForce2 Ultra 400 core logic takes things forward a little and provides a good home for the new CPU.www.hexus.net
Which £400 equates to £738.61 in todays money, so I agree with you there, as that's more than a 9950X3D!
GPUs have gotten more expensive. That statement is indisputably true. The days of high-end cards being £500 (in today's money) are long behind us. They have been cheap relative to what they cost now. If you are looking at the cost relative to the total % of a rig, sure, the GPU takes up most of it (and always has), but today it takes up even more. That is compounded further by other components becoming cheaper and GPUs continuously rising in price.
Saying "but everything else has gotten more expensive" doesn't detract from the fact that GPUs have risen in price, astronomically, from their prices of just a decade or more ago. Even the 980 Ti and 1080 Ti were £600-700. Going beyond consumer: the Titan/X/XP were around the £1k mark. That's now the price of a 5080. The 5080 hasn't suddenly become a non-consumer card in a new dress and IO panel. It's still just a high-end consumer card.
The X1950XTX was the best AMD consumer card money could buy
www.bit-tech.net

I did see an article suggesting that, in light of DDR5 shortages, some datacenters were potentially considering (re)using DDR4 on modules connecting via CXL (coherent memory interface built on top of PCI)im looking at ddr4 prices and it looks like they have also started rising?
Bought my OCZ 8800GTX with lifetime international warranty for £300 direct from the USA, exchange rate was a lot better back then as well, around $2 vs £1.So let's find an old school 5080 equivalent, the 8800 GTX.
The 8800 GTX in 2007, was £480 MSRP on launch, that equates to £837.45 in todays money - which is nearly double the '£500 for a high-end card' that you've claimed.
"8 November 2006, 18:58
this SKU will sell for around £480 at a host of etailers, so it's not cheap, but technology leadership rarely is.
The summary is straightforward for once. If you want the absolute fastest graphics card available, right now, the GeForce 8800 GTX is it."
No? The 9070 XT is not a high-end card. The last high-end card AMD released was the 7900XTX. https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-com...ck-hyunh-talks-new-strategy-for-gaming-marketIf you're going to say that, then I can easily argue that charging £579.99 currently for a 9070 XT, is no more expensive than the X1950XTX was when adjusted into today's money? The X1950XTX was £330 in 2006, which equates to £575.75 in todays money!
"Overclockers UK is currently listing the Radeon X1950XTX on pre-order for just under £330 inc VAT."
Source:
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ATI Radeon X1950XTX | bit-tech.net
Today, ATI is launching several new video cards with a complete refresh of its product lineup. We have a look at the new flagship Radeon X1950XTX part. It comes complete with a spanking new cooler and some GDDR4 memory. Read on to find out if it's any good...www.bit-tech.net
So a current top end ATi/AMD card, has gone up by a whooping £4.24 in 20 years![]()