'The retail SSD market has almost disappeared,' says Silicon Motion exec — PC OEMs are buying third-party drives as direct NAND supply dries up

4 days ago by mecen to c/technology

But developers of SSD controllers still benefit from the situation.

According to Duann, PC makers have to buy from SSD module makers because NAND vendors reduced allocation to the client/consumer PC market and redirected most NAND supply to data center products.

As a result, PC OEMs like Acer, Asus, Dell, and HP cannot get enough NAND or SSD supply directly from NAND manufacturers and have to turn to module makers for solid-state drives. The latter traditionally served end-users and had plenty of aftermarket products with enhanced performance and cooling, but now they increasingly serve PC makers instead.

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mesamunefire 9 points 4 days ago

I dont agree with all the points but Collapse OS has a fascinating read: https://collapseos.org/civ.html

In this case its driven by greed...but if you cant get a hold of chips because of ANY factor, its going to look more and more like collapse os is more right than wrong.

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