I know this has probably been said but I haven't seen it here so i'll throw it out there, while I have no hard numbers I am curious as to the actualy # of units of RDram and DDRram shipping. I could be wrong but I think part of the price disparity is due to the fact that DDR supplies haven't increased all that much while AMD board owners have, and while the origional ammount of DDR was sufficent to fit the demand-supply curve, it may now be overstressed (i.e. more demand thus greater prices) while the number of origionally shipping RDram units was large but demand was small, contributing to exorbanat prices (that and the new manufacturing and R&D costs), but both have gotten better and boards are now shipping with RDram bringing prices to acceptable levels. If we are arguing over morals and people base their arguments on price, they should understand the basic economics behind it not just, Rambus tried to rip us off, or Price = the best.
I have read the reports on the whole Rambus dealings and Intel courship and I was very displeased. I was also displeased to later find out that my last computer ran on the fabled i820 chipset (corrupted math coprocessor and expensive as hell memory for a measely 5% increase in mem bandy if that). However, being as I could not afford to replace the system I opted to keep it and bought more ram at what would be considered today exorbanant prices. However, I do not feel cheated and I do not feel slighted because I simply moved my ram over to my next system and finally saw the level of performance capable by a well engineered product. For everyone who will now attempt to slam me on latency issues fire away.
I also have to say that a corporation's ethics such as Rambus' may seem improper and indeed wrong, but unless you work in the senior levels of management for your company and know all of the workings of the pressures placed upon individuals from shareholders, accountants, and more importantly the CEO then you probably have a good idea of how immoral many companies can be when it comes to improving their own self interests.
Am I defending poor business practices? No, I am attempting to show that the individuals behind a corporation are what makes it moral or immoral, therefore the company should not be hated, despised, or shunned. Instead it should be pitied until such a time as they can find the correct people to make good on their business practices. Besides, bad business doesn't survive, Enron is an example, and if Rambus gets it's act together they have a chance to be a profitable and performance providing company, but if they can't then they won't last, and then what use is arguing over the morals because in the end everything will work itself out.