17 comments

  • MrGilbert34 days ago
    Would love to see them succeed and take on the pc builder market, aka hobbyist market. Honestly, the recent rise in RAM left me behind with a huge amount of disbelief and anger. Anger primarily, because big corporations are responsible for draining the market, while on the other hand a Satya Nadella states that they are sitting on a pile of GPUs they cannot use because of limited power.[1]<p>I simply cannot understand how that will ever be profitable. To me, it just looks like a huge waste of resources.<p>[1]: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;redmondmag.com&#x2F;blogs&#x2F;generationai&#x2F;2025&#x2F;12&#x2F;microsoft-is-sitting-on-a-pile-of-unused-gpus.aspx" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;redmondmag.com&#x2F;blogs&#x2F;generationai&#x2F;2025&#x2F;12&#x2F;microsoft-...</a>
    • KronisLV34 days ago
      Same with Chinese GPUs: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;videocardz.com&#x2F;newz&#x2F;chinas-lisuan-begins-shipping-6nm-7g100-gpus-to-early-customers" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;videocardz.com&#x2F;newz&#x2F;chinas-lisuan-begins-shipping-6n...</a><p>Sure those particular ones are still using TSMC but at least people are doing something to prevent everything from being such oligopolies: which is also why I own an Intel Arc A580 and B580.<p>Any step towards market competition is nice to hear about.
    • heavyset_go34 days ago
      I&#x27;d love to see it, but they&#x27;ll be given the BYU&#x2F;Huawei&#x2F;etc treatment to keep the silicon cartel&#x27;s margins from crashing.
      • checker65934 days ago
        The world exists outside the US too you know.
        • heavyset_go34 days ago
          Plenty of countries gave Huawei the same treatment the US did, and the US and its allies have the weight to impose sanctions, tariffs, etc to punish consumers within their borders for daring to consider better and cheaper options.
          • TitaRusell34 days ago
            There&#x27;s a difference between cutting off a phone from Google apps and a memory stick. Huawei phones became basically useless for every day use.<p>With RAM you can always just AliExpress it. I live in a small country yet every day literally MILLIONS of packages come in from Asia.
          • chvid34 days ago
            The allies of the US all banned Huawei because the US asked them (quite forcefully) to do so.<p>CXMT is already under a full set of US long arm sanctions so probably only very little of their products will ever reach western markets.<p>However some Chinese demand will definitely be met by CXMTs product displacing western suppliers - so maybe there is a tiny bit of relief for western consumers there.
            • WarOnPrivacy34 days ago
              &gt; However some Chinese demand will definitely be met by CXMTs product displacing western suppliers - so maybe there is a tiny bit of relief for western consumers there.<p>I recall years of hints that the affordable housing crunch would eventually be helped by developers - even tho they&#x27;re only building tons of not-affordable housing.<p>We&#x27;re five years in. No meaningful change is visible from the perspective of folks who need affordable housing.<p>Based on that lesson, I expect what CXMT does there to have no meaningful effect here.
              • mgh9534 days ago
                &gt; I recall years of hints that the affordable housing crunch would eventually be helped by developers - even tho they&#x27;re only building tons of not-affordable housing.<p>If I may ask, what cities? For example, Austin has seen a 6.6% asking price decrease for 0- to 2-bedroom units [1]. The big problem is there is an absolutely massive hole, and very few places are building &quot;enough&quot; to make a dent.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.realtor.com&#x2F;advice&#x2F;hyperlocal&#x2F;austin-rents-are-going-down&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.realtor.com&#x2F;advice&#x2F;hyperlocal&#x2F;austin-rents-are-g...</a>
              • ahartmetz34 days ago
                The RAM market is much more commoditized than housing. Almost any increase in supply should reduce prices world-wide.
              • renewiltord34 days ago
                How could a subsidized housing number increase from building not-subsidized housing? That is illogical. The market rate housing will become cheaper and therefore more housing will be affordable to more people but you can’t make the number of “affordable housing” units go up by building anything else because “affordable housing” is a brand name for subsidized housing.
            • mycall33 days ago
              Is that because CXMT is using stolen tech?<p>Downvoting doesn&#x27;t answer my question though.
              • chvid31 days ago
                No - all advanced semiconductor production in China is under an elaborate set of US sanctions regardless of company.
          • checker65934 days ago
            Ok, but BYD is everywhere
            • yetihehe33 days ago
              Chinese electric vehicles are <i>unofficially</i> banned in Polish army bases, probably in other countries too.
            • mycall33 days ago
              How much stolen tech does BYD use? Is that even a factor in not allowing them into the US?
              • checker65933 days ago
                I don&#x27;t know about that. All I&#x27;m pointing out is that just because US doesn&#x27;t like China doesn&#x27;t mean there isn&#x27;t a bigger market out there. So, even if China ends up servicing that market only, that&#x27;s still a big chunk of the pie. So, case in point, a Chinese DRAM maker flooding the market with cheap(er) DRAMs (or any DRAM for that matter -- thanks Micron), will end up affecting the price of DRAM in the US.
                • mycall33 days ago
                  That&#x27;s true. The greater the numbers, the lower the demand on the global scale (unless those all be consumed by AI too). It makes me wonder if AI data centers will never be satisfied.
          • zarzavat34 days ago
            Yes, and? There are Huawei stores all over Asia, that little place where 60% of people live.
            • heavyset_go34 days ago
              Sucks for everyone else is what I&#x27;m saying. 100% of people should be allowed access, not be preempted from it in order to protect the value of exalted tech cartels.
      • PixyMisa34 days ago
        Doesn&#x27;t matter given the current shortages.<p>If CXMT can fill more of China&#x27;s domestic demand, that&#x27;s still good news for us all.
      • mensetmanusman34 days ago
        Doesn’t matter, more supply equals lower costs. Also, China can barely afford all of its states propping up the BYU supply chain with free cashflow.
      • TiredOfLife34 days ago
        Are they known to supply Iran?
    • babypuncher34 days ago
      It&#x27;s a colossal misallocation of resources by a handful of fucknuggets so wealthy that they will never experience real consequences for it. Meanwhile, everyone else is made to suffer.
      • lenkite33 days ago
        What&#x27;s horrifying is that many of them are going to ask for bailouts in the future - using the reason of &quot;national security&quot;.
    • viccis34 days ago
      This is a situation in which a government would typically step in and force companies to stop ratfucking end users in favor of business partners, but the problem here is that (a) it&#x27;s an international problem that would require cooperation with China and (b) the US has the most venal administration in history and has already taken bribes from AI and hardware companies.<p>These companies going all in on purely AI partnership sales are foolish because the aforementioned user ratfucking is step two of Doctorow&#x27;s original description of enshittification:<p>1. Attract users and partners with market disrupting quality of service<p>2. Screw over users in favor of partners, knowing that users are less likely to be critical and more likely to be locked in<p>3. Screw over partners once you&#x27;ve achieved enough market dominance that they are also locked in<p>4. Use rent seeking behavior (government bribes, etc.) now that you&#x27;ve exhausted your users and partners for growth
      • dmix34 days ago
        This is an announcement of increased competition in a market with acute supply shortages. That’s exactly what is supposed to happen.<p>Jumping to regulating the global RAM market this early sounds like the worst of all solutions. You want people to get cross-government approval every time they want to buy or sell RAM? American companies will call up Korea to get their RAM rations.
        • anonymous90821334 days ago
          Note that the company in question is specifically sanctioned by the US, so this is not exactly a glowing example of the utopia of the free market you seem to be holding it up as.<p>Rationing chips makes sense to me. You don&#x27;t have to set the ration at a low enough level that it would ever impact legitimate businesses. You could just set a ration level that prevents a company that is losing hundreds of billions of dollars from spending imaginary money buying 40% of the annual raw material supply despite lacking the capability to refine the raw materials into a working product, for the sole purpose of denying it to their competition. You strawmanned the opposition as requiring cross-government approval &quot;every time anyone wants to buy RAM&quot;, but maybe we could just start with requiring cross-government approval to buy 40% of the global supply.
          • ZWoz34 days ago
            Seems like supporting argument against governmental regulation. In this specific case, against sanctions.
    • Neywiny34 days ago
      It&#x27;s all money circles. Everything&#x27;s made up and nothing matters
      • roenxi34 days ago
        How do you expect this comment to be interpreted? I&#x27;m ruling out RAM as a social construct, I&#x27;m pretty sure it exists in the physical world.
        • Neywiny34 days ago
          It actually kinda doesn&#x27;t. I more meant around the GPUs where directly or otherwise Nvidia pays Microsoft, Microsoft pays Nvidia, both stocks go up by more than those amounts, profit.<p>But for RAM, Sam Altman didn&#x27;t put in a purchase order for idk 10 trillion DIMMs or something. He said he would buy a bunch of wafers. A tweet had put it well: he said he&#x27;d buy wafers that don&#x27;t yet exist for computers that don&#x27;t exist for data centers that don&#x27;t exist for AI models that don&#x27;t exist for demand that doesn&#x27;t exist.<p>So the demand is kinda made up the same way there were TP shortages at the height of covid. There&#x27;s plenty enough to go around, but one person rocks the boat and everyone goes nuts.
    • mensetmanusman34 days ago
      These situations usually lead to price collapse in the long run. Prices are simply an information vector on what humans should be doing for others globally.
    • WhereIsTheTruth34 days ago
      You&#x27;ll never be able to buy their chips, the US will impose trade restrictions once it forces South Korea to ramp up production in US fabs<p>The entire price crisis stems from anticipation of that prospect
    • EA-316734 days ago
      It’s essentially an economic death spiral, but that has a lot of energy and dynamism until it crashes. In this case as long as NVIDIA prints money and people are willing to play pretend for a paycheck, this will go on.<p>But it will end and who knows how many lives will be ruined in the fall.
      • casey234 days ago
        Lives ruined by lack of DRAM? my guess is somewhere between 0 and 1
        • orangeboats34 days ago
          Reading comprehension! The GP was clearly referring to the current AI boom, which is the root cause of DRAM price surging.
  • walterbell34 days ago
    <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.semiconsam.com&#x2F;p&#x2F;why-did-the-memory-chicken-game-keep" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.semiconsam.com&#x2F;p&#x2F;why-did-the-memory-chicken-game...</a> | <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;s-space.snu.ac.kr&#x2F;bitstream&#x2F;10371&#x2F;95351&#x2F;1&#x2F;01%20Jeho%20Lee.pdf" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;s-space.snu.ac.kr&#x2F;bitstream&#x2F;10371&#x2F;95351&#x2F;1&#x2F;01%20Jeho%...</a><p><pre><code> Chinese memory makers are the product of massive state backing, with tens of billions of dollars in subsidies and the full weight of the Chinese government behind them. Could Samsung win a power struggle against the Chinese government? .. The market that [Samsung, SK Hynix and Micron] created by surviving is completely different from the past. When there were ten players, even if I cut output, someone else could simply increase theirs. But now that only three remain, everyone knows all too well that if anyone recklessly expands supply, everyone goes down together.. the market paradigm has shifted from a “market share (M&#x2F;S) war” to “profit maximization.” </code></pre> <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;x.com&#x2F;semianalysis_&#x2F;status&#x2F;2005458750296256654" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;x.com&#x2F;semianalysis_&#x2F;status&#x2F;2005458750296256654</a><p><pre><code> The key to (CXMT) achieving 10nm-class DRAM mass production at a speed that seemingly defies physics lies in its complete acquisition of Samsung’s PRP process roadmap—a project that took Samsung five years and 1.6 trillion KRW to develop. </code></pre> <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tomshardware.com&#x2F;pc-components&#x2F;dram&#x2F;samsung-engineer-accused-of-leaking-10nm-dram-process-data-to-chinas-cxmt" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tomshardware.com&#x2F;pc-components&#x2F;dram&#x2F;samsung-engi...</a><p><pre><code> South Korean prosecutors indicted multiple individuals in a case alleging that a former Samsung engineer leaked advanced DRAM manufacturing process data to [CXMT] .. shedding light on how leaked trade secrets may have accelerated China’s push into 10nm-class memory.. engineers in question allegedly took note of detailed critical manufacturing steps in handwritten notes taken over five years.. handwritten notes remain difficult to track or audit. Investigators say the accused engineer exploited this gap by memorizing and transcribing process flows, which is virtually impossible to police effectively.</code></pre>
    • coliveira34 days ago
      Samsung is 100% backed by the state as well.
      • throwaway8582534 days ago
        CXMT is Chinese backed whereas Korea is Samsung backed.
        • tooltalk34 days ago
          I see what you did there. LOL<p>Samsung closed the last Chinese smartphone factory in 2019 and moved South to Vietnam. In 2020, Samsung&#x27;s Vietnam production accounted for about 25+% of the country&#x27;s GDP and export.
          • throwaway8582534 days ago
            They don&#x27;t call it the republic of Samsung for nothing.<p>Japanese companies are also nearshoring to vietnam.
      • tooltalk34 days ago
        This was mostly in the 80&#x27;s during the cold war.<p>IMO, and it&#x27;s not even really clear how Samsung&#x27;s DRAM business really benefited from the state backing. The South Korea gov&#x27;t first major initiative &quot;Semiconductor Industry Promotion Plan&quot; started only after Samsung&#x27;d developed their first 64K DRAM in 1983. It really helped other local industry competitors such as LG and Hyundai catch up, but Samsung was already on a roll -- by the early 90&#x27;s, the company became the first to develop 256Mb DRAM. Not clear whether they really needed hand-holding from the gov&#x27;t.
        • coliveira34 days ago
          As mentioned in the sibling comment, Samsung practically owns S Korea. It&#x27;s a fools errand to separate Samsung from the government.
          • TiredOfLife34 days ago
            Even prisons in Korea are just vacation places for Samsung chairman.
          • ahartmetz34 days ago
            Don&#x27;t entirely discount the other chaebol.
      • ahartmetz34 days ago
        Silicon Valley first thrived on defense spending.
        • coliveira33 days ago
          They still do. Where do you think comes a large part of Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta money?
          • ahartmetz33 days ago
            AFAIK it&#x27;s far from the 50+% of the 50s, though.
            • coliveira33 days ago
              The government leniency and support for oligarchy and way more important than the dollars they could provide. The current regime could be characterized as a techno surveillance state run by a few oligarchs.
    • mittensc34 days ago
      everything leaks eventually.<p>this wouldn&#x27;t be such a problem if prices weren&#x27;t so insane. Samsung would still have volume&#x2F;know how&#x2F;efficienciez.
    • xzjis34 days ago
      As a free-software advocate, I believe competition should be based on investment in industrial machinery and labour, not on secretly guarded know-how. If Samsung, Micron, and SK-Electronics weren&#x27;t an oligopoly trying to squeeze maximum profit out of consumers and instead offered good prices, China wouldn&#x27;t be able to—and would have no interest in—subsidizing private companies to get them on the same level. It&#x27;s only the greed of these three companies in their oligopoly that has put them in such a fragile position, where the slightest competition could be fatal to them.
    • dmix34 days ago
      IP is basically DOA if you’re competing with China
    • tempest_34 days ago
      Basically the same thing that happened to Nortel.
      • walterbell34 days ago
        Five years of memorized handwritten notes is a bit more old school corporate&#x2F;state espionage than remote network breach, <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;nationalpost.com&#x2F;news&#x2F;exclusive-did-huawei-bring-down-nortel-corporate-espionage-theft-and-the-parallel-rise-and-fall-of-two-telecom-giants" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;nationalpost.com&#x2F;news&#x2F;exclusive-did-huawei-bring-dow...</a><p><pre><code> Security advisor Brian Shields discovered that not one, but seven Nortel executives, including CEO Frank Dunn, had been hacked, and that the hackers were vacuuming an alarming volume of sensitive material out of its databases. By the end of his investigation, Shields says he was able to track the theft of over 1,400 documents.. during a six-month period when bosses allowed him to monitor the stealing. He found evidence the break-in of Nortel’s internal computer network had started no later than 2000, and probably began in the 1990s. He says it lasted past 2009..</code></pre>
      • throw383636434 days ago
        Reminds me of when those European monks smuggled silkworms out of China.
        • tooltalk34 days ago
          too bad that there is nothing to steal from modern China.
    • Johanx6434 days ago
      &gt;Could Samsung win a power struggle against the Chinese government?<p>Translation: Could Korean government win a power struggle against Chinese government
  • dworks34 days ago
    Since I&#x27;m in China, I took a look at Taobao hoping to find cheaper ddr5 sticks made with CXMT chips. Unfortunately, they are the same price or only marginally cheaper than Hynix sticks (1900 - 2300 rmb for 32g ddr5). Perhaps capacity at CXMT is not very high yet.
    • ksec34 days ago
      &gt;Perhaps capacity at CXMT is not very high yet.<p>They failed to achieve quality and decent yield. And that is at least 10 years from DDR3 to DDR5. On the other hand YMTC from NAND space are moving to DRAM.
    • amluto34 days ago
      Or maybe CXMT is not dumb? If the worldwide price of some commodity is $100 and you can produce an item that is nearly as good as everyone else’s, would you sell it for $98 or for $50?<p>Or the supply of non-CXMT DRAM is sufficient poor right now that Chinese buyers, of which there are plenty, are willing to pay approximately as much for CXMT’s product as for anyone else’s?<p>CXMT’s real ability to reduce prices will come (if it does) by adding enough supply to drive down prices everywhere, or at least everywhere that is willing to import CXMT’s products without absurd tariffs.
      • heavyset_go34 days ago
        If they have the runway, they can try the tried and true method of undercutting competitors until they fold, and then capture the market for themselves.<p>Investors have the stomach for this tactic, surely a company with the state&#x27;s backing can remain solvent even longer than those funded by private investors.
        • amluto33 days ago
          I think the economics are wrong for this, at least so far. CXMT seems to be scaling up as fast as they can, and they have maybe 5% market share. They can’t flood the market with cheap DRAM because they don’t have enough DRAM yet — I’m not convinced they could materially impact anyone else’s profits even if they literally gave away their entire output. At best selling their product cheaply might help them gain some mindshare as integrators test it and hopefully discover that it meets the spec and works fine. What they need is capital and time with which to scale, and selling at a profit-maximizing price will get them the most capital, and this benefit may well exceed the actual profit on goods sold: the stock market might appreciate that they are profitable, thus making it easier for them to obtain funding under favorable terms.<p>If they actually want to try to destroy their competitors by undercutting them, they need to be able supply enough DRAM to actually drive down the price. At the rate that the big buyers are buying DRAM, that will take several more years at least.<p>I’m curious whether their presumed inability to buy ASML machines might actually help them. If they can meet the target DDR5 and HBM specs without EUV while maintaining decent yield and acceptable power consumption of the finished product, they may well be able to out-scale their competitors. I imagine it’s a lot easier to procure the equipment for additional DUV lines than EUV lines, especially with other Chinese vendors doing their best to supply semiconductor manufacturing equipment.
        • nijave33 days ago
          Other nations would likely step in before letting China corner the DRAM market
          • walterbell33 days ago
            Ending memory &quot;shortage&quot; due to OMEC production cuts of NAND wafers. Everyone wins.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=46415338#46419776">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=46415338#46419776</a>
        • ajsnigrutin33 days ago
          RAM is cheap to make (well, relativly).<p>Undercutting the competitors is done when a business is working close to cost and a slight anomaly (eg. competitor that doesn&#x27;t have to make profit, is subsidized or is cheaper for some artificial reason) makes them go out of business.<p>A stick of ram, made for $10, that used to cost $20 is now $100 due to the AI bubble (numbers pulled out of my ass)... you&#x27;d have to bring the prices down to $15 or even less to make those companies fold, but you can earn much more if you sell your ram at $80.
      • walterbell34 days ago
        That depends on whether your investor (China) also sells integrated products whose sales would increase if RAM were cheaper, e.g. smartphones or mini PCs with bundled LPDDR5, <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theblaze.com&#x2F;columns&#x2F;opinion&#x2F;your-laptop-is-about-to-become-a-casualty-of-the-ai-grift" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theblaze.com&#x2F;columns&#x2F;opinion&#x2F;your-laptop-is-abou...</a><p><pre><code> Research and development in conventional computing are already suffering. Investment in efficient CPUs, affordable networking equipment, edge computing, and quantum-adjacent technologies has slowed as capital and talent are pulled into AI accelerators. This is precisely backward. Narrow AI — focused on real-world tasks like logistics, agriculture, port management, and manufacturing — is where genuine productivity gains lie. China understands this and is investing accordingly.</code></pre>
        • dworks34 days ago
          Mini PCs seems to be the perfect vector, since the only serious manufacturers are Chinese brands. International brands only seem to dabble in this sector.
          • walterbell34 days ago
            If (SO)DIMM memory prices rise to the stratosphere while integrated memory in Chinese mini PCs remain relatively affordable, from 16GB Intel N150 to 128GB AMD Strix Halo for Edge AI, there will be industry-altering consequences that persist long after DRAM pseudo-shortages end. Oligopolists can relearn old lessons, <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;The_Innovator%27s_Dilemma" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;The_Innovator%27s_Dilemma</a><p><pre><code> New companies that serve low-value customers with poorly developed technology can improve that technology incrementally until it is good enough to quickly take market share from established business.</code></pre>
            • dworks34 days ago
              Indeed. I am waiting to buy a Strix Halo on Taobao when supply has been replenished. I asked the manufacturer if price would remain the same after restocking, they said they weren&#x27;t sure. They re-stock in the middle of January, so it will be interesting to see what the price ends up being. I wonder if there is any advantage of having integrated memory in this regard?
              • walterbell34 days ago
                <i>&gt; any advantage of having integrated memory</i><p>Power efficiency. Strix Halo also offers unified CPU&#x2F;GPU memory with 256 GB&#x2F;s memory bandwidth, which brings it closer to Apple Silicon performance for local LLMs, <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;chipsandcheese.com&#x2F;p&#x2F;strix-halos-memory-subsystem-tackling" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;chipsandcheese.com&#x2F;p&#x2F;strix-halos-memory-subsystem-ta...</a><p>Another opportunity is low-latency storage with millions of IOPS. Nvidia is rebooting Intel&#x27;s cancelled (see eBay) Optane for &quot;AI Storage&quot;. Future Mini PCs and LLM accelerators for Narrow&#x2F;Edge AI industrial use could benefit from high-IOPS storage, <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tomshardware.com&#x2F;tech-industry&#x2F;nvidia-and-kioxia-target-100-million-iops-ssd-in-2027-33-times-more-than-existing-drives-for-exclusive-use-in-ai-servers" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tomshardware.com&#x2F;tech-industry&#x2F;nvidia-and-kioxia...</a>
          • toast034 days ago
            I know there&#x27;s more variety and typically lower prices (and sketchier windows licenses) from the Chinese brands, but last I looked, there&#x27;s lots of options if you want an established brand. You can even get them from the likes of HP, Dell, Lenovo (still chinese, but), etc.
            • walterbell33 days ago
              Is there an Intel N150 or Ryzen mini PC (NUC form factor) made by HP, Dell or Lenovo?
              • toast033 days ago
                I think these have pretty high prices (as I acknowledged in my first message), but they exist. And I see similar things all over the place in retail and medical settings.<p>Here&#x27;s a recent AMD processor one from Lenovo <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.lenovo.com&#x2F;us&#x2F;en&#x2F;p&#x2F;desktops&#x2F;thinkcentre&#x2F;m-series-tiny&#x2F;lenovo-thinkcentre-m75q-gen-5-tiny-amd&#x2F;len102c0051" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.lenovo.com&#x2F;us&#x2F;en&#x2F;p&#x2F;desktops&#x2F;thinkcentre&#x2F;m-series...</a><p>Here&#x27;a a Dell with Intel. I can&#x27;t decipher Intel&#x27;s model numbers, but it&#x27;s DDR5 so it can&#x27;t be that old. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.dell.com&#x2F;en-us&#x2F;shop&#x2F;cty&#x2F;pdp&#x2F;spd&#x2F;dell-pro-qcm1250-micro&#x2F;bts001d_qcm1250_usx" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.dell.com&#x2F;en-us&#x2F;shop&#x2F;cty&#x2F;pdp&#x2F;spd&#x2F;dell-pro-qcm1250...</a>
                • walterbell33 days ago
                  1 litre micro PCs are about 4X (35W+) TDP and price of Intel N150 with 6W TDP. They do offer more performance and features (e.g. security) than N150, but exist in a separate and stable (15+ year) category of business desktop.<p>Mini-PCs have a range of experimental form factors, including mini-desktop, NAS, router, tablet, SBCs, industrial with GPIO, thanks to competition between Chinese and Korean (e.g. ODROID) OEMs.<p>HP has a $220 4GB Windows laptop and $400+ 8GB Chromebook based on Intel N150.
      • dworks34 days ago
        Why would I buy CXMT if it&#x27;s virtually the same price as Hynix?<p>Edit: I see you made an edit without noting that you did so.<p>Only this sentence was in the pre-edit comment: &quot;Or maybe CXMT is not dumb? If the worldwide price of some commodity is $100 and you can produce an item that is nearly as good as everyone else’s, would you sell it for $98 or for $50?&quot;<p>For your added comments: There is no supply issue, there are hundreds of sellers of Hynix, Crucial, Samsung ddr5 on Taobao. For your second comment about them driving down prices later on by increasing supply, well, I first of all noted that perhaps capacity is not great in my comment, and you are also contradicting your first point where you said CXMT would be stupid to compete on price.<p>In reality, the history of every Chinese market entrant, even those leading technologically, shows that they always cut margins to compete by driving down costs. I have a decade worth of experience related to this.<p>I believe CXMT simply has not gotten to the stage where they really try to win market share and crank up supply - perhaps due to lack of capital, or as I said, due to capacity limitations (which may be a result of capital).
        • eunos34 days ago
          I&#x27;m not even sure most people know the difference. RAM is RAM for most people, that know and willing to buy RAM sticks on their own.
    • nirui34 days ago
      I&#x27;m watching the price refresh since last year, hoping the domestic manufacturers in China could rebalance the price a bit. Nope, it turned out that did not happen. It&#x27;s a free money grab right now of course they raised their prices.<p>But I guess Americans will not be buying Chinese RAMs&#x2F;SSDs for critical applications (such as AI), and not a lot of user outside China will use Chinese AI due to restrictions such as censorship etc being enforced on it, limiting the growth and scale of the tech. So, there is still hope that some of the manufacturers will eventually pivot towards tried and true consumer products.
    • PixyMisa34 days ago
      Like Nanya in Taiwan, DDR5 production at CXMT is in its early stages and a small fraction of their overall shipments. Give it a year and that will likely change.
  • amluto34 days ago
    I wish them luck.<p>The other major DRAM makers use ASML machines, and I’m curious how competitive CXMT will manage to be without them.
    • eek212134 days ago
      No DRAM manufacturer I know of uses ASML. DRAM is several years behind on lithography due to complexity&#x2F;differences.<p>Outside of that, I hope China can manage to obtain a foothold in silicon, the world, especially NVIDIA, Micron, Hynix, etc. definitely needs a wake up call. The AI world was spooked when China released an MIT licensed LLM model that outperformed others in many metrics at the time, let us hope that others can follow on this success.
      • cpldcpu34 days ago
        All of them use ASML lithography, including CXMT.<p>They are, of course, a bit slower in EUV adoption. But its already there:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tomshardware.com&#x2F;pc-components&#x2F;dram&#x2F;micron-samples-ground-breaking-euv-based-memory-new-dram-process-slashes-power-consumption-by-20-percent-and-boosts-performance-by-15-percent" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tomshardware.com&#x2F;pc-components&#x2F;dram&#x2F;micron-sampl...</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.techinsights.com&#x2F;blog&#x2F;samsung-d1z-lpddr5-dram-euv-lithography-euvl-memory-techstream-blog" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.techinsights.com&#x2F;blog&#x2F;samsung-d1z-lpddr5-dram-eu...</a>
      • nerdsniper34 days ago
        No thank you, for the overconfident misinformation. Of the three large DRAM companies in the world Micron is the only one based in the USA.<p>Micron s&#x2F;uses&#x2F;“will use” ASML’s EUV machines[0] in New York. Micron shares some info on their EUV DRAM process[1].<p>DRAM composed 80% of Micron’s revenue, NAND is about 20%.<p>0: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.syracuse.com&#x2F;business&#x2F;2023&#x2F;09&#x2F;mind-boggling-machines-are-headed-for-microns-clay-fabs-and-so-are-the-worlds-top-chip-suppliers.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.syracuse.com&#x2F;business&#x2F;2023&#x2F;09&#x2F;mind-boggling-mach...</a><p>1: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.micron.com&#x2F;products&#x2F;memory&#x2F;1gamma-dram-technology" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.micron.com&#x2F;products&#x2F;memory&#x2F;1gamma-dram-technolog...</a>
        • arjie34 days ago
          A bit harsh. It&#x27;s just information outdated by a year. The majority of DRAM by all big manufacturers is still on DUV tech AFAIK. Micron&#x27;s &quot;1-gamma&quot; is pretty new. It&#x27;s been less than a year since Micron started shipping DRAM based on that process.<p>And to the OP&#x27;s comment: CXMT won&#x27;t be making stuff for an Nvidia H100 any time soon haha, but there&#x27;s a lot of stuff out there that&#x27;s not that.
        • kevin_thibedeau34 days ago
          &gt; Micron uses ASML’s EUV machines in New York<p>Will use. The fab isn&#x27;t built yet.
          • boojums33 days ago
            Micron&#x27;s FQ1 2026 report says they expect their 1-gamma process (uses EUV) to the be the majority of their bit output by the second half of the year. The same report says they&#x27;ve already begun sampling 1-gamma parts to OEMs, so they must have a fab somewhere using EUV already.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;investors.micron.com&#x2F;static-files&#x2F;530bd7ed-a8c8-4687-af4a-8c129f740e09" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;investors.micron.com&#x2F;static-files&#x2F;530bd7ed-a8c8-4687...</a>
            • kevin_thibedeau33 days ago
              The Boise plant is being reactivated and is not ready for EUV production yet. The Syracuse plant won&#x27;t be running until 2030. Their Japan and Taiwan fabs are scheduled for the 1-gamma rollout.
    • tooltalk34 days ago
      China was the largest buyer of ASML systems last quarter, or about 45+%. DRAMs don&#x27;t need EUV (yet?)
  • dartharva34 days ago
    It&#x27;s good that if not anything, the AI giant&#x27;s antics have shaken up the industry awake and made us aware of how finicky the current status quo is with essential commodities for the entire world being choked up by a handful of suppliers. In the end as new entrants increase, with fortune, the consumers shall eventually be better off as things settle.
  • coliveira34 days ago
    Great, this is an area that clearly needs more production and lower prices, something China is exceedingly good at.
  • chhxdjsj34 days ago
    Anyone got any tips on ways to buy ipos&#x2F;equity on Shanghai STAR exchange? I want unitree and cxmt
    • dworks34 days ago
      You cannot buy these. You can only buy companies listed in Shanghai and Shenzhen that are enrolled in Stock Connect, which has certain requirements that means these small IPOd companies cannot be enrolled. It is possible that there mutual funds or ETFs in HK that are available, and hold these types of companies.
    • chvid34 days ago
      Me too - these are incredibly interesting companies and the valuations are modest.<p>Unfortunately as far as I can see it is not possible from where I am (Denmark).<p>Some Hong Kong shares and linked Shanghai shares are available in interactive brokers but not these ipoes.
  • rldjbpin30 days ago
    DRAM is relatively less complex to get into for those encouraged to get into semiconductor manufacturing. while there is a time and resource lag and probably a decent chunk of time before these could match the sota, here&#x27;s to more competition to break the oligopoly.<p>it has become this due to the cyclical mania and bad margins on the troughs killing companies. hopefully this current hunger for memory make it less painful down the line.
  • nutjob234 days ago
    It&#x27;s an opportune moment given how wildly expensive and in demand DRAM is and hopefully it&#x27;ll give notice to the incumbents that they&#x27;ll lose market share if they expand production.<p>As they say in business: &quot;Your margin is my opportunity&quot;
  • bgbntty233 days ago
    Would love to see a new player make ECC RAM or even rowhammer-resistant RAM. I&#x27;d accept the price increase and the performance penalties for such RAM.
  • tonyhart734 days ago
    need some competition right as of price of ram is as much as expensive as GPU or entire system
  • lysace34 days ago
    My bet is on illegal price fixing, for the nth time.
    • tooltalk34 days ago
      I don&#x27;t think illegal price fixing is the only thing to worry about if China comes to dominate the business.<p>better the devil you know than the devil you don&#x27;t.
  • bschmidt2500433 days ago
    [dead]
  • almaight34 days ago
    Technological communism means that everyone can afford the latest technology.
    • coliveira34 days ago
      Of course, people always forget that communism is based on huge production of everything. That&#x27;s why China can continue to do this and break capitalist companies.
      • heavyset_go34 days ago
        This is strictly state capitalism, and not communism, at work and I&#x27;d argue that the &quot;state&quot; qualifier is redundant.
        • coliveira33 days ago
          Yes, to achieve communism, state capitalism is a necessary tool. I&#x27;m not saying it will be achieved, but that&#x27;s how it could progress.
  • TheRealPomax34 days ago
    Not sure how you&#x27;re taking on Samsung or Micron when both of them have pulled out of the market...?
    • icegreentea234 days ago
      Micron pulled out of the consumer market, they&#x27;re still making DRAM.<p>There&#x27;s been no news on Samsung exiting any DRAM market as far as I can tell?
      • walterbell34 days ago
        <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;tech.yahoo.com&#x2F;computing&#x2F;articles&#x2F;ram-shortage-stay-samsung-clears-044507205.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;tech.yahoo.com&#x2F;computing&#x2F;articles&#x2F;ram-shortage-stay-...</a><p><i>&gt; Samsung is officially stepping in to shut down the panic. The company has firmly denied reports that it plans to kill off its consumer SATA SSD production. In a direct statement, a spokesperson made it clear: the rumors are false, and Samsung isn’t going anywhere.</i>
    • arjie34 days ago
      Micron hasn&#x27;t pulled out of the market CXMT is in. They make DRAM chips, same as CXMT. They might also make DIMMs for servers and so on, but CXMT is primarily competing with the DRAM chip stuff.
  • peter_d_sherman34 days ago
    I asked Perplexity.ai to list all of the DRAM manufacturing companies that it could. What follows is that list:<p>Samsung Electronics – <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.samsung.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.samsung.com</a><p>SK hynix – <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.skhynix.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.skhynix.com</a><p>Micron Technology – <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.micron.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.micron.com</a><p>ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT) – <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cxmt.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cxmt.com</a><p>Nanya Technology – <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nanya.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nanya.com</a><p>Winbond Electronics – <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.winbond.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.winbond.com</a><p>Powerchip Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp. (PSMC) – <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.psmc.com.tw" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.psmc.com.tw</a><p>Fujian Jinhua Integrated Circuit (JHICC) – <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.jhicc.com" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.jhicc.com</a><p>GigaDevice – <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.gigadevice.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.gigadevice.com</a><p>Etron Technology – <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.etron.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.etron.com</a><p>Integrated Silicon Solution Inc. (ISSI) – <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.issi.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.issi.com</a><p>Elite Semiconductor Memory Technology (ESMT) – <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.esmt.com.tw" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.esmt.com.tw</a><p>Zentel Electronics – <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.zentel.com.tw" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.zentel.com.tw</a><p>Alliance Memory – <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.alliancememory.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.alliancememory.com</a><p>AP Memory Technology – <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.apmemory.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.apmemory.com</a><p>AMIC Technology – <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amictechnology.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amictechnology.com</a><p>Hua Hong Semiconductor – <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.huahong.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.huahong.com</a><p>(Note that I have not researched each of these companies individually... There may be errors in the above list (some may be DRAM resellers, some may be defunct, etc., etc.))
    • tooltalk34 days ago
      The first three dominate 95+% of the market.
      • peter_d_sherman34 days ago
        That&#x27;s true.<p>Coke and Pepsi dominate the worldwide drink market, but due to the immense size of the market, there are always up-and-coming competitors.<p>Go to your local superstore, supermarket, or your local convenience store.<p>You&#x27;ll find Coke and Pepsi, lots of it, but you&#x27;ll also find no-name drinks and sodas from drink companies that are not as well established yet or well known.<p>That those exist is a good thing, at least for consumers, at least for those that consume, because the root of all consumer prosperity brought on by capitalism (global trade = capitalism, regardless of the names of countries involved) comes from the relentless competition brought on by two or more companies, ideally as many as possible...<p>We would not have the super high performing desktop computers we have today if it were not for the historic early competition between AMD and Intel (later entered by other CPU manufacturers), and we would not have choice if it were not for competition.<p>Getting back to DRAM manufacturers, The first three do dominate 95+% of the market as of 2026.<p>But there might be some interesting up-and-coming smaller companies to watch...<p>Let&#x27;s remember that OpenAI came from basically nowhere -- to give Google a run for its money -- as did Google with Microsoft&#x27;s behemoth 20+ years ago...<p>What new DRAM manufacturer might be the next up-and-coming DRAM manufacturer in the space?<p>Well, we don&#x27;t as-of-yet know... but the space is an interesting one to watch, to be sure!<p>But you are correct!<p>The first three do currently dominate 95+% of the market as of 2026...
        • nijave33 days ago
          Isn&#x27;t there higher barriers to entry than OpenAI and soda? They were able to compete with &quot;commodity&quot; hardware. A DRAM manufacturer would need expensive machines from ASML, right?
        • Fnoord34 days ago
          I&#x27;m not forced to drink Coke or Pepsi if I go to a bar. Only if I specifically want a cola I very likely get whatever cola they got (likely either Coke or Pepsi). If you want to use a computer, it will have DRAM, and you&#x27;ll end up with one of the DRAM hardware manufacturers.<p>&gt; Let&#x27;s remember that OpenAI came from basically nowhere -- to give Google a run for its money -- as did Google with Microsoft&#x27;s behemoth 20+ years ago...<p>Yeah, but the capital behind it certainly did not:<p>&gt; OpenAI was initially founded as a nonprofit organization by Altman, Greg Brockman, Elon Musk, Jessica Livingston, Peter Thiel, Microsoft, Amazon Web Services, Infosys, and YC Research. When OpenAI launched in 2015, it had raised pledges for $1 billion. [1]<p>Altman was well connected, with rich friends. People like Thiel and Musk. Under the guise of a non-profit they eventually pulled a rug to make OpenAI for-profit.<p>The barrier of entry for hardware design is also just plain different than software. There was a good talk on that recently on 39c3.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Sam_Altman" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Sam_Altman</a>
          • peter_d_sherman33 days ago
            We know, minimally, from Perplexity&#x27;s list above, that there exist multiple alternative DRAM manufacturers other than Micron, Samsung and SK Hynix, that have completed at least some of the barriers of entry to the high-end DRAM market, and possibly many...<p>We also know that the world is full of capital -- as you suggest.<p>That capital is continually looking for investment opportunities, and DRAM is a huge, huge <i>market</i>...<p>When capital invests in markets, any barriers to entry are moved, if not outright displaced (i.e., OpenAI, $1 billion, etc.).<p>Point is, we don&#x27;t know what the future will hold...<p>I think it&#x27;s a good bet that cheaper DRAM, DDR5 and otherwise, will be coming down the pike soon, once production catches up, once supply outpaces demand...
          • nijave33 days ago
            Seems more likely OpenAI or one of the hyperscalers would continue vertical expansion into chips but likely only supply themselves--possibly making proprietary variants only they could use anyway<p>Seems to be the case with CPUs although I know that&#x27;s a bit different since they&#x27;re contracting with existing fabs
      • PixyMisa34 days ago
        And the next two are 95+% of what&#x27;s left after that.