I'd build a temple to that happening and pray at it every day.If there’s an AI bubble and it bursts or deflates, memory manufacturers could find themselves back where Samsung was in 2023—sitting on such big piles of unsold chips that they have to reduce prices to move all the inventory.
I pray every day that Sam Altman will be forced someday to sit and literally eat all the uncut, unused, RAM wafers he decided to take away from everyone else so he can have some kind of nebulous competitive advantage in his quest to "Win AI". May his bloody colon be the salvation for all the rest of us.I'd build a temple to that happening and pray at it every day.
Of course. Because they're better than us. You can tell by how much money they have. I have 105, they have 1010. They are 100,000 times as good as me. QED.The worst part is knowing that the bubble-blowers are somehow going to make out handsomely no matter how badly it pops.
I've been tempted to build a PC just because I have a few spare 32 GB sticks of DDR4 and an idle 3080. I don't need another computer. I don't even know what I would begin to do with it.For kicks, I built a PC on Newegg a few days ago. $830 for 64GB RAM. A year ago, I bought 16GB for $63. I was hoping to replace a PC this year, but not holding my breath. Guess I'll stick with this Intel i7-9700k for another year or two.
Me too. But folks like us are being attritioned out. Younger people are accustomed to subscriptions for computational services. Local computing is going away.If I can't afford to build or buy a new PC to run AI, learn AI, build with AI, then the AI companies won't be making any money on me.
Ebay or similar? Give to a family member or friend?I've been tempted to build a PC just because I have a few spare 32 GB sticks of DDR4 and an idle 3080. I don't need another computer. I don't even know what I would begin to do with it.
But with prices where they are, it feels wasteful to just have the hardware sitting there.
sell them and buy a used car with the cash.I've been tempted to build a PC just because I have a few spare 32 GB sticks of DDR4 and an idle 3080. I don't need another computer. I don't even know what I would begin to do with it.
But with prices where they are, it feels wasteful to just have the hardware sitting there.
I wish I'd bought twice as much as I did back in June. 32GB then:For kicks, I built a PC on Newegg a few days ago. $830 for 64GB RAM. A year ago, I bought 16GB for $63. I was hoping to replace a PC this year, but not holding my breath. Guess I'll stick with this Intel i7-9700k for another year or two.
That ship sailed in the 80's. These people don't make any income, they are given stock options at rock-bottom prices that they exercise once a decade for funding purposes. Usually tax-free.This is why we need a marginal tax of 95% on any income over $10 million annually. If the amount of money you can earn is tied to your company's share price, and gouging consumers during scarcity increases your profits and share price, that's what CEOs are going to do.
To be clear, a tax rate of 95% on $10m isn't going to solve all the world's problems, it just removes the incentive to behave like this. If 95% of your planned bonus is going to go to the IRS, then it makes more sense not take the bonus, and instead invest more in your workers, the company, and the economy as a whole.
You're making the mistake of thinking that you are their customer. You are far too small to be their customer. They were never planning on making any money off of you.If I can't afford to build or buy a new PC to run AI, learn AI, build with AI, then the AI companies won't be making any money on me.
Micron probably won't get back into the consumer market. They'll resell their chips to packagers like GSkill instead.All I know for sure is that Micron will not be getting my business when they decide to reenter the consumer market.
I actually did use one in a PC I just finished building for a friend, which is why I don't have a spare AM4 motherboard or Ryzen 7 CPU on hand.Ebay or similar? Give to a family member or friend?
There are quite a few orgs that take spare computer parts for charity, if you want to avoid the profiteering feelings. It would probably still require human interaction however.I actually did use one in a PC I just finished building for a friend, which is why I don't have a spare AM4 motherboard or Ryzen 7 CPU on hand.
The thought of selling them has, of course, occurred to me...but it feels kind of profiteer-ish to price them according to the market, and pricing them where they should be just means they get picked up by a scalper to resell.
I don't mean to make this sound like it's some huge challenge; it plainly isn't. It's just that doing something better than having them sit in a box takes effort. And possibly human interaction.
If I can't afford to build or buy a new PC to run AI, learn AI, build with AI, then the AI companies won't be making any money on me.
Oh, that's a great call; thanks!There are quite a few orgs that take spare computer parts for charity, if you want to avoid the profiteering feelings. It would probably still require human interaction however.
That will be 0 wafers the guy has to eat. OpenAI only signed letters of intent. There is no 40% of the market they are buying (OpenAI doesn't have the billions for that). The rest of the market went into panic mode just because OpenAI declared their intent to corner the market.I pray every day that Sam Altman will be forced someday to sit and literally eat all the uncut, unused, RAM wafers he decided to take away from everyone else so he can have some kind of nebulous competitive advantage in his quest to "Win AI". May his bloody colon be the salvation for all the rest of us.
Wow, I was lucky to buy a RAM-heavy server for our lab in July. That machine contains 24 32GB sticks, which would be prohibitively expensive right now. And I complained back then how expensive RAM was...
Your username suggest that you might be an enthusiastic buyer.That sir, is a retirement plan right there.
I just built a new computer for my roommate. I warned them to buy the RAM soon, but they didn't. It was literally the last thing they went to get. So I ended up pulling the old ram (32 gb) out of the old computer (about 8 years old) and putting it in the new one. The RAM was fine as is, but slower than the stuff that came out years later. The CPU made up for some speed issues, and the Linux OS boots up about ten times faster than Win10 did, so they're happy.For kicks, I built a PC on Newegg a few days ago. $830 for 64GB RAM. A year ago, I bought 16GB for $63. I was hoping to replace a PC this year, but not holding my breath. Guess I'll stick with this Intel i7-9700k for another year or two.
Yep. Feels like we are the proverbial 'Herd of Cats' being slowly but surely directed back into our little computer cubicles where we will use Mainframes with TSO accounts. We will only run approved Programs with approved Data and be happy with the approved Output. The era of owing your computer and controlling what is on it is rapidly coming to an end. Oh, you will still pay for one but everything that runs on it will be dictated by Microsoft, Google, and other mega corps.You aren't understanding their end goal. It's not about YOU having a PC. Its about you renting cloud services from someone else as you are just some plebeian peasant who can't spend 4-7 grand on a BYO computer. Subscriptions, That is the end goal. Get everyone to constantly funnel money into a company until the day you die and probably after you die as it will probably auto renew the subscription.
Where?You can still buy DDR4 locally for not insane prices.