Historical memory prices 1960-2026

(dam.stanford.edu)

38 points | by vga1 2 hours ago

9 comments

  • Dibby053 5 minutes ago
    One could also blame crypto and AI (they're clearly responsible for some of the volatility in the graph), but I can see the curve flatten in the 2010s, just as Moore's law ended.
  • fernly 1 hour ago
    Says, not inflation-adjusted. With reason; adjusting those 1960-1980 prices for inflation would make the graph a lot taller.

    Pricing "per GB" before 1990 is unrealistic, though; nobody thought in GB or purchased GB quantities, or conceived of GB systems. I remember a moment circa 1973 when I saw an IBM CE about to do an upgrade on a 370 system at Cal Berkeley. He had a box with several carefully-packed, large circuit boards. "So, is that a megabyte?" I asked. "Yup, that's a meg."

    • levocardia 10 minutes ago
      Yes, you really need "dollars per amount of RAM you need for standard computing tasks." Windows 11 requires a bare minimum of 4 GB of RAM, Window 10 only needed 1 GB.
  • WithinReason 17 minutes ago
    So a price per GB today is about the same as it was in 2010
    • micromacrofoot 7 minutes ago
      sure but you also need more gb these days for various tasks so it's not 1:1

      I wonder if developers will start trying to do more with less in certain areas

  • chvid 29 minutes ago
    You could also do a computing pr dollar graph - which would be a similar sharp decline over the past decades - however it won’t show anything like the memory price spike of the past few years.
  • anonymousiam 22 minutes ago
    It certainly doesn't look as bad as it really is when presented on a log scale chart.
  • DoctorOetker 51 minutes ago
    is multi-level DRAM worth considering? storing multiple voltage levels per DRAM capacitor?
    • pixelesque 49 minutes ago
      If you care about only capacity and cost yes, but not if you care about performance.
  • bpavuk 58 minutes ago
    turns out things are not that bad! we just rolled back to 2010.

    oh, wait, now every app is a browser instance. shit.

    EDIT: so, how did I arrive at 2010, you ask? I looked at DDR5 pricing and found the closest pricing per GB in the past. this turned out to be DDR3 memory. I think it's totally fair since it was the latest and greatest thing back then, much like DDR5 is now. although, if we compare DDR3 to DDR3, we still roll back pretty far - a very close to current price was spotted in 2018, '17, 15, '13, and '11.