[citation][nom]memadmax[/nom]So, you wait on a new HD and build urself a RAMDrive lol[/citation]
I had been thinking over the prospects there, too: that SSDs might see a boost in sales due to the spike in HDD supply. Of course, NAND flash is built using a different process than DRAM, but market prices I see would suggest that NAND prices are also pretty low too, even if not as staggeringly cheap as DRAM is.
[citation][nom]billybobser[/nom]anyone with sandy bridge won't need ram for anything other than bragging.[/citation]
There's uses for a PC other than web surfing and gaming. For those using production software (even something as simple as Photoshop) you can very rapidly run out of RAM when working on something really big. In fact, that's the reason why there's a point to the quad-channel memory controllers of Intel's SandyBridge-E and AMD's Interlagos: not for the doubled memory bandwidth, but because they give you 8 slots instead of 4; that way 64GB is possible, and 32GB is pretty affordable. And yes, if you're working on audio or video editing, you WILL use up that much: the editing has to be done with it uncompressed, after all.
[citation][nom]funguseater[/nom]Damn, when are we getting DDR5?[/citation]
You might be confusing GDDR with DDR; they are two separate things. Currently, no DDR beyond DDR3 exists yet. GDDR memories are actually modified versions of other DDRs; as of right now, there's been GDDR3, GDDR4, and GDDR5. The first two have been modified versions of DDR2, and the last is a modification of DDR3.