Soldato
- Joined
- 16 Jan 2003
- Posts
- 10,940
- Location
- Nottingham
OcUK could definitely be cheaper on SSD's I ordered a 960 Pro 512GB £80 cheaper elsewhere.
Last year my 500Gb Samsung 850 Evo was £105
This year one would be £150-160
In 2013 I got a 480GB SSD from OCUK on offer for £149.99, nice to know the SSD manufacturer price gauging has managed to undo four years of technological progression xD
NB: It's worth noting that while SSD price fixing is new it's been going on in storage in general for a long time, a 1TB HDD today costs what a 500GB HDD cost in 2010!
There are two major HDD manufacturers left, and a handful of SSD manufacturers (companies that sell other peoples SSD with their name on it aren't manufacturers).I reckon there are too many companies for a price fixing conspiracy
It's nothing to do with price fixing, just look at supply and demand.In 2013 I got a 480GB SSD from OCUK on offer for £149.99, nice to know the SSD manufacturer price gauging has managed to undo four years of technological progression xD
NB: It's worth noting that while SSD price fixing is new it's been going on in storage in general for a long time, a 1TB HDD today costs what a 500GB HDD cost in 2010!
Hahahahhaahahahahahahahahahahhahahahaha, oh man hat's a good one, As it's early I almost thought you were serious XDIt's nothing to do with price fixing, just look at supply and demand.
You need to learn about the NAND/DRAM industry and the current transition that is taking place, together with the exceptional demand for NAND.oh man hat's a good one, As it's early I almost thought you were serious XD
Haha, you're actually serious? I think you need to read up on the history of the SSD/HDD market. HDD prices are currently higher per GB than they were in 2011, SSD prices are higher per GB than they were in 2013, this has nothing to do with transitions/etc, it's simply due to price fixing and manufacturers keeping prices artificially high.You need to learn about the NAND/DRAM industry and the current transition that is taking place, together with the exceptional demand for NAND.
You need to learn about the NAND/DRAM industry and the current transition that is taking place, together with the exceptional demand for NAND.

They will still sell millions of OEM units.So if every one stopped buying n stuck together you'll soon see the prices Tumble.
Yeah..but have you noticed how quickly prices rise compared to how slowly they fall.