That feels so bad for signal integrity, especially at 5+ GT/s
SODIMM-to-DIMM adapters offer a workaround for DDR5 price hikes
Submitted 13 hours ago by tal@lemmy.today to technology@lemmy.world
https://videocardz.com/newz/sodimm-to-dimm-adapters-offer-a-workaround-for-ddr5-price-hikes
Comments
bobo1900@startrek.website 12 hours ago
AmbitiousProcess@piefed.social 12 hours ago
It is. As Salem Techsperts tested on their YouTube channel, you often have to downclock the RAM for it to actually function without errors.
However, with the prices for RAM still being so high, you could save a decent amount of money with this if you’re willing to keep your speeds a little lower.
Munkisquisher@lemmy.nz 47 minutes ago
If you’re slowing it down beyond ddr4 or ddr3 Levels, you’re better buying an older system that’s not as inflated. Though related to that, the price of ddr4 motherboards has shot up as there’s a shortage due to people pairing it with affordable ram
StopSpazzing@lemmy.world 5 hours ago
Didnt LTT also do this, only remember it being slower but usable.
HakFoo@lemmy.sdf.org 7 hours ago
I wonder if the next generation of memory will only have a SO-DIMM pinout so they don’t have to split limited supply. Maybe larger “desktop or highend laptop” modules will be physically longer like 2230/2280/22110 SSDs
just_another_person@lemmy.world 11 hours ago
Horrible idea
tal@lemmy.today 13 hours ago
“Partial workaround” wou’d probably be more accurate. As the article body points out, DDR5 SO-DIMM prices are also up, albeit not as much as DDR5 DIMM prices.
But it’s substantial enough of a price difference to be interesting.
Zeoic@lemmy.world 11 hours ago
The 48GB x 2 kit of so-dimm i bought in the summer is 5x the price I paid for it… If anything it seems so-dimm is worse right now
multiplewolves@lemmy.world 7 hours ago
I bought a little 32 GB kit (x2 16GB) of DDR4 in February for ~$56; It is now $193.82, or about three and a half times the earlier price, so I’m going to have to agree with you that it isn’t really better (and may actually be worse for DDR5). I bought a refurb laptop this autumn with DDR5 RAM because it cost only slightly more than the individual kit would have been (and it came with a TB SSD and reasonable CPU, but has on-board graphics).
If SODIMM were much cheaper, it might be worth the performance degradation to use an adapter, but as it stands, I don’t think it is. If it comes down to what’s available to someone on an individual basis, it could be a good option.
SharkAttak@kbin.melroy.org 7 hours ago
Of course, everyone is hoarding them now.