LightningZ71
Platinum Member
- Mar 10, 2017
- 2,616
- 3,303
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I see two things:
1) the stratospherically high RAM prices will measurably hurt consumer PC and DIY sales by taking away budget for other components. This will also drive up prices for GPUs as they use a lot of ram. If the rest of the computer is getting notably more expensive, there's going to be hard downward pressure on CPU prices. AMD can't really afford to raise prices very much for their "mid tier" parts. High end isn't price sensitive so long as you have clear leadership in enough areas.
2) AMD will do an impression of Spinal Tap and turn their top SKU up to 11. 24 core Ryzen 11 at a new price class. There is PLENTY of space between Ryzen and TR now.
1) the stratospherically high RAM prices will measurably hurt consumer PC and DIY sales by taking away budget for other components. This will also drive up prices for GPUs as they use a lot of ram. If the rest of the computer is getting notably more expensive, there's going to be hard downward pressure on CPU prices. AMD can't really afford to raise prices very much for their "mid tier" parts. High end isn't price sensitive so long as you have clear leadership in enough areas.
2) AMD will do an impression of Spinal Tap and turn their top SKU up to 11. 24 core Ryzen 11 at a new price class. There is PLENTY of space between Ryzen and TR now.
