The period of price stability is over.
Published:
22 May 1999 y., Saturday
Memory chip prices are once again in a downward spiral as the most popular variety has hit an all-time low on the spot market. The plunge comes after a brief period of price stability which had offered some hope for beleaguered memory chip makers. Micron, one of the largest manufacturers of memory chips, is seeing price declines, after a three-month respite from price decreases, according to a spokesperson. The price of 64-megabit DRAMs, the most widely used memory chip today, fell to a record low on the spot market of $6.70 per chip, according to a report in the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, a major Japanese business daily. The report said this was a drop of 17 percent from the end of March and 30 percent lower than mid-February.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
A new generation of smart phone "iPhone5" will go on sale in September.
more »
The Collector USB Flash Drive is one awesome concept that I’d love to see on shelves.
more »
Internet Giant Google announced that they will be investing $168 million in a solar energy power plant being developed in the Mojave Desert by the startup BrightSource Energy.
more »
New battery in your phone or laptop, that is charged hundreds of times faster.
more »
Facebook has announced that it will share the design secrets behind its new energy-efficient data centre with rival companies.
more »
The powerful new 15.6” ASUS-Automobili Lamborghini VX7 offers a completely revamped notebook experience...
more »
Moonwatch clock is designed to determine the relation between lunar cycle and human emotions.
more »
Every year, Fortune magazine comes out with its list of the Most Admired Companies in the world.
more »
NASA's Messenger spacecraft delivers its first photos of Mercury and the first images ever taken from the rocky planet's own orbit.
more »
What is the current role and likely future role of social media tools like Facebook and Twitter in framing European discourse?
more »