as long as people are still buying them at current $/gb, they're not going to change very much.
So you're saying that if intel could come out tomorrow with a 50 dollar cheaper SSD, they wouldn't make a killing and outperform all their competitors and make their shareholders extremely happy?
:hmm:
:thumbsup:
Any silicon product costs almost nothing to make. Sell enough to recoup development costs and pay for the manufacturing stuff and you can sell em very cheap. Much cheaper than hard drives, for example.
Current Jmicron drives are not crappy. They are merely mediocre. I'd use one over a HDD any day.
So you are saying the material costs for an SSD are lower than the costs for a hard drive?
Hate to tell you, but you are very wrong on this one.
Probably a lot less costly to test SSDs.The question is about the future cost, not today's cost.
SSDs are just silicon and circuit boards. If they are ever widely adopted they'll get very cheap. Probably just be chips on a MB.
Probably not, actually, because one of the companies that Intel would be undercutting is themselves, they'd be destroying the profit margins from all of their higher end parts, and would flood the SSD market with cheap SSD's rather than lining their pockets with profits!
If Intel could reduce costs of SSD production by $50 (let's say, on a 120GB drive, so a ~42 cent reduction in production cost per GB), then that alone would make their shareholders happy - think about it, an extra $50 profit per SSD!!!
They'd probably start by having their products priced either the same as they are now or a little bit cheaper to give them a competitive advantage (if necessary) and pocket the difference. These things are designed to hit specific pricepoints, so if they can hit $150, $200, $250, etc. they are happy. Intel, like any company, is not going to pass all of the savings of production on to the consumer!