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Corsair's discounted 32GB Vengeance is the cheapest DDR5 on the market by a big margin
By Ben Stockton last updated
Deals You can grab 32GB of DDR5-6200 Corsair Vengeance RAM for $300.99 right now. That's a $130 discount on its (current) list price, a serious saving in a market that the AI boom has left in ruin.

RAM Price Index 2026: Daily lowest price on DDR5 and DDR4 memory of all capacities
By Zhiye Liu last updated
Check the best prices on DDR5 and DDR4 memory kits of different capacities.

Micron's $24 billion Singapore fab could need 500 transformers, more than double the output of any single manufacturer
By Luke James published
Micron’s planned $24 billion NAND flash expansion in Singapore will require 400 to 500 power transformers, which is more than double the 100 to 150 units a standard wafer fab typically needs.

Micron predicts that cars will need 300GB of RAM
By Jowi Morales published
Self-driving cars are essentially AI supercomputers on wheels.

Corsair’s limited-time memory sale brings 25% savings
By Kunal Khullar published
While Corsair’s DDR5 deal offers notable discounts, rising DRAM prices mean buyers still pay significantly more than before.

SK Group chairman says memory chip shortage will last until 2030
By Luke James published
SK Group chairman Chey Tae-won told reporters at Nvidia's GTC conference in San Jose on Monday that the global memory chip shortage is likely to persist for another four to five years.

Micron enters high-volume production of HBM4 for Nvidia Vera Rubin
By Luke James published
The HBM4 36GB 12H stack runs at over 11 Gb/s pin speeds, delivering bandwidth greater than 2.8 TB/s.

RAM kits are now sold with one fake RAM stick alongside a real one to create a performance illusion
By Zhiye Liu published
V-Color announces new 1+1 DDR5 memory kits with one real memory module and one filler module for AMD-based systems.

Retailer denies memory replacement due to 4x increase in DDR5 pricing, says price increase would equate to an 'upgrade' for the customer
By Bruno Ferreira published
Australian retailer refused to exchange a RAM kit under warranty and instead told the customer they needed to pay the difference in price.
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