LCD TV demand helps stabilize low-density SDRAM spot prices
Strong LCD TV demand this year has helped hold spot prices for 64 Mbit (2 Mbit x 32) SDRAM 200 remain relatively stable, as compared to other commodity DRAM prices, according to industry sources.
According to figures consolidated from DRAMeXchange, the spot price of 64Mbit (2 Mbit x 32) SDRAM 200 peaked at US$1.98 in January but plunged to the US$1.3 level in June before climbing back up since then.
More here at DigiTimes.
New deal brings handwriting abilities to Nintendo DS
- DDR2 prices still falling faster than DDR prices
- SiS projects Q4 chipset shipments up 32 percent
- David Strom: The Coming Digital Revolution According to Carly
- Amazon profits sink 44 percent on settlement
- Intel increases 300 mm capacity in New Mexico fab
- IBM opens patent vault for healthcare development
- Hong Kong man convicted in first BitTorrent internet piracy case
- Customers 'in charge' in the digital world, says Fiorina
- Employers struggling to retain top IT staff
Google denies testing e-commerce competitor to eBay
- Las Vegas Airport switches to RFID luggage tags
- Canon shows off a fuel cell powered digital camera
- IBM launches open-source storage consortium
- RFID passports coming in two months
- Cellphone shipments to top 800 million, research firm says
- Semiconductor industry criticizes IP protection in China
- Second Hand Smoke: Protecting The Twitch Generation
- Microsoft denies preparations to support OpenDoc in Office 12
- Sharp maintains higher LCD margins than industry rivals
Sponsored
See more
Latest news
Miscellaneous Previous news
Partners




