Rendered at 20:47:01 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) with Cloudflare Workers.
quaddoggy 24 hours ago [-]
Anecdata: Ordered my Mac mini M4 Pro (48GB) on April 1. Was told it wouldn't be available until June 4 but it just came in yesterday—a full month early. So I think there is an "underpromise; overdeliver" thing happening with current orders. Will be curious to see what happens with the Mini M5 release this year.
JKCalhoun 21 hours ago [-]
Put in an order for 64GM Mac Mini late March. I'm feeling luck now having pulled the trigger when I did.
storus 23 hours ago [-]
It seems like M3U 512GB RAM was a unicorn we won't ever see again :( Many skipped buying it with the hopes of a 768GB-1TB M5U but it looks increasingly unlikely.
jdboyd 21 hours ago [-]
Maybe for the M6 or M7 generation that might happen?
jauntywundrkind 19 hours ago [-]
I'm really interested to see what Apple eventually does. I don't think Apple will ever again be at all interested in releasing something as genuinely capable at a reasonable price point: my expectation is they are working real hard on new things that they can and will charge vastly more for, that include not just amazing bandwidth but ridiculous cores too, that justify enormous colossal price points (above and beyond the unbelievable cost of ram+nand).
There's some really wild patents on some wild systems architectures here, spanning 2021 to 2024. A lot of this can definitely go into an Ultra like design, but there's definitely broader possibilities here, that I expect they're now working furiously on. https://bsky.app/profile/ogawa-tadashi.bsky.social/post/3mif...
It's just so hard for me to come to terms with what a post-consumer Apple would be like! The Ultra chips are the mini-computers to the mainframe, and in this arena, they need to scale up and move upmarket and I cannot imagine how weird it would be to be an Apple that is so torn like that: that is still the worlds favorite consumer computing, but that also is selling mini-data-center like things, at phenomenal price.
Eventually if component prices ever settle that will be a commanding position to be in, to sell widely from, to have architecture for: but for the next half decade? A torn Apple.
hulitu 11 hours ago [-]
> I'm really interested to see what Apple eventually does
MacOS X runs pretty well in 4GB of RAM and the build quality matters more. /s
gyomu 24 hours ago [-]
The Mac Mini and Studio are due for an update in the coming months, a part of this is also probably that they’d rather save memory to build up their next gen model inventory rather than current gen ones?
jshier 23 hours ago [-]
Like trvz said, they use different memory. M3 Ultra uses LPDDR5X 6400 MT/s, M4 Max uses LPDDR5X 8533 MT/s, while all the M5 models use LPDDR5X 9600 MT/s.
cpuguy83 22 hours ago [-]
Does it free up fab space to make the newer ram?
trvz 23 hours ago [-]
No, the memory is different enough.
icwtyjj 23 hours ago [-]
A lot of discussion surrounding the ram shortage seems to imply that it will recover, but AI companies slurping up ram for training hasn't gone down and probably won't ever. Is there any signs that the situation is improving or is this just the new normal?
librasteve 23 hours ago [-]
RAM has always been a boom/bust cycle - a square wave with the period about the time it takes to bring a new state of the art fab online (3 years ish)
NooneAtAll3 22 hours ago [-]
boom-bust cycle historically used to apply only to latest generation (f.e. DDR5 now), but current crisis affects previous gen DDR4 as well (and a bit of DDR3 too)
It feels much more like cartel behaviour, where all the players recognized blame can be redirected to "Ai demand" and "Sam Altman secret deal"
bilegeek 22 hours ago [-]
I hope it won't be this bad forever, but RAM companies are currently slow-walking any booms (not fast-tracking new fabs, etc.) in hopes of avoiding a bust. Seems it'll be more of a slow decay to still-inflated pricing.
thoughtpeddler 21 hours ago [-]
From what I understand, the RAM shortage is more about AI inference than AI training. Yes, training created much of the early HBM crunch because frontier-model training clusters need tons of HBM near GPUs, but inference is what is keeping the pressure on now and into the future.
piskov 22 hours ago [-]
Chinese fabs will alleviate some of the pressure
comrade1234 23 hours ago [-]
These don't have normal ram, right? The ram is part of the die of the processor? So... what's going on? They're keeping the chips for themselves? They're moving production to other lower memory configurations? But why? That's where demand is? Probably more demand at higher memory though?
I'd buy one or two but I can't stick them in a Colo because they don't have LOM or dual power supplies but I've been seriously thinking about buying one and just keeping it at home and having my Colo servers talking to it for local deepseek.
Not a high priority though considering how cheap deepseek is.
cayleyh 22 hours ago [-]
The ram is "unified" meaning it's a single shared between CPU and GPU, and it's "on package", meaning the RAM chips are packaged together with the CPU / GPU die, but it's just regular old RAM chips.
It’s still dedicated ram on a separate chip, which is affected by supply shortages.
The ram is soldered onto the SoC in close proximity to the main arm chip. What’s different is that it is simultaneously addressable by cpu and gpu cores, not part of the same die as the apple silicon unit.
nicoburns 23 hours ago [-]
> But why?
So they don't have to stop producing machines entirely because they've run out of RAM chips. The problem they have is with supply not demand.
comrade1234 23 hours ago [-]
They don't use ram chips?
nicoburns 22 hours ago [-]
They do. They just solder them onto their SOCs (as part of the manufacturing process of the SOC). But they can't do that if they haven't got any.
piskov 22 hours ago [-]
It is still ram, not some magic thing
Still LPDDR
rasz 22 hours ago [-]
Its normal POP (package on package) ram. Apple marketing somehow managed to convince public its magic special HMB.
wat10000 22 hours ago [-]
Same package, but separate die. It’s still competing with all the other RAM buyers.
ProfessorLayton 24 hours ago [-]
The base mac mini I got has been one of the best tech purchases I've ever made, and of course as soon as I wanted another [loaded] machine for more serious work this happens.
It's absolutely wild that Apple's desktop machines now cap out at less ram than their portables which can't sustain an intensive workload without throttling!
shell0x 23 hours ago [-]
I bought a Mac Studio with 128gb RAM and M4 Max a year ago for local LLMs. 96gb memory doesn’t seem to be sufficient?
leptons 23 hours ago [-]
What? 640K should be enough for anyone!
mannyv 23 hours ago [-]
The listings on eBay are also super tight. If you can find a Mini/Studio it's priced at a premium.
jmclnx 24 hours ago [-]
People may not remember, it is ~1980 all over again. There was a massive 'chip' shortage back then were the mini-computer company I was at and many others could not get chips they needed.
In fact, chips were kept under lock and key to prevent theft. But there was a massive theft there were 20,000 chips were stolen.
rasz 22 hours ago [-]
It was so bad Sun Microsystems of all places was buying smuggled Japanese ram from Jack Tramiel
May 15, 1989
FBI SA and US Customs Agents advised Assistant US Attorney that source information and investigation had determined that Atari Corporation was importing 256K DRAMS into the US in false packing containers, and without proper import documents in violation of US import laws and contrary to import agreements between the US and the Japanese Ministry of Industry and Trade. Atari purchases large quantities of DRAMS from Japanese manufacturers for use in their Taiwanese manufacturing plants. Purchasing in Taiwan allows Atari to obtain the DRAMS at a greatly reduced price. There are strict import quotes on the DRAMS, because of Japanese flooding of the market in years previously but there are no import duties. By shipping the DRAMS in the U.S., Atari can thereby increase the price by approximately four times their purchase price. The original manufacturers, whether Fujitsu or Mitsubishi would not be allowed to import this quantity at this price into the U.S., because this practice stifles U.S. manufacturers.
Investigation determined that Atari was importing large quantities, 150,000 or more a wekk into the U.S. since May,1988. None were declared through U.S. Customs, and it appears telexes and telephones were used to order specific quantities in furtherance of this scheme.
Based on the above, Assistant US Attorney stated he would consider prosecution of this matter under the Wire Fraud Statutes or 1001 Falsification of Import Documents.
SOURCE: FBI Case 87A-SF-40454, Pages 42-43
cyberax 23 hours ago [-]
In early/mid 90-s, it was common for thieves to steal RAM sticks from computers in school/university labs.
24 hours ago [-]
post_break 24 hours ago [-]
[dead]
sgt 24 hours ago [-]
Apple should just start making their own RAM and not rely so much on the suppliers like Hynix etc
mft_ 23 hours ago [-]
Apple certainty has the financial resources to support other companies in e.g. developing specific innovations or building infrastructure (and has done so in the past) as long as there's an RoI for Apple.
It would surely be a smart move to support the right partner in quickly starting a new memory factory, precisely to Apple's specifications, in return for a long-term supply agreement? If Apple could secure their memory supply and at a lower cost than all of the their PC and phone competition, it would be hugely beneficial for them.
tracker1 24 hours ago [-]
Memory designs are pretty entrenched with the various patents involved... I've said a few times that I don't know why Intel hasn't gotten back into DRAM production with their fabs. I suspect they may be contractually limited when they sold off their memory businesses.
coldtea 24 hours ago [-]
>Memory designs are pretty entrenched with the various patents involved...
Can't be any more entrenched than CPUs, GPUs, and broadband chips, which Apple still designs.
larkost 23 hours ago [-]
Design is not the problem. Having foundry space to manufacture is the bottleneck. It is just all being sucked up (with AI needs being the big additional load).
And to be clear, the foundry space for CPUs/GPUs is not the same as for RAM, which is printed with much larger feature size in order to lower the costs.
tracker1 3 hours ago [-]
I don't think it's that... you have three companies that control over 90% of the market that have been convicted of collusion and price fixing more than once, when there were even more companies in the mix. The memory companies aren't producing at max capacity, they're price fixing.
Beyond this, memory isn't produced on leading end nodes, they're a few generations back as it is. For that matter, Intel isn't even near capacity and has/had plenty of opportunity to produce VRAM and SSD Storage, they got out of both as they became more commoditized.
coldtea 23 hours ago [-]
I agree design is not the problem. I am answering the claim that "the various patents involved" would be the show stopper.
tracker1 3 hours ago [-]
And how much did Apple pay to get involved and overcome? There was LOTS of litigation involved.
absolute8606 23 hours ago [-]
For CPUs, they are still licensing ARMs cores, of course with their own modifications, and they bought Intel’s modem businesses, which likely gave them the patents they needed. GPUs I can’t speak to on this though.
Marsymars 22 hours ago [-]
> For CPUs, they are still licensing ARMs cores
To be clear here, Apple doesn't actually license any cores from ARM - they've got an architectural license and implement their own cores. Licenses for cores are a different thing.
throawayonthe 23 hours ago [-]
for gpus i believe they license ip from PowerVR/Imagination
SpecialistK 22 hours ago [-]
They used to. Switched to designing their own with the A11 about a decade ago.
cosmotic 23 hours ago [-]
Apple doesn't make their own CPUs, they just design them (using ARM IP). It's TSMC that makes them. The bottleneck with RAM is the manufacturing side.
sgt 6 hours ago [-]
The designing of the chips and Apple Silicon is the hardest part by far. By design we mean the engineering.
Production is not trivial, but can be outsourced to several parties.
cosmotic 4 hours ago [-]
Those third parties are running at capacity and are certainly the source of the increased prices since the supply is outsized by the demand.
selectodude 23 hours ago [-]
They don’t use ARM IP. They have an architecture license. They basically created aarch64.
HerbManic 24 hours ago [-]
Alas RAM is basically a commodity product, unless they could have some design advantage over others like the A and M series chips, there is little incentive to go into RAM.
If Apple had the manufacturing capabilities then sure, but they would still be running into the same resource constraints for inputs that everyone else is having nowadays.
At the moment, there are no solutions only responses.
caycep 23 hours ago [-]
They could justify it as a capacity investment, like buying all the tooling for their aluminum laptop bodies.
JumpCrisscross 23 hours ago [-]
Unless Apple comes up with a novel memory, which I wouldn’t put beyond Cupertino, it makes more sense to participate in economies of scale.
kleton 23 hours ago [-]
Apple normally just does prepayment for capacity- funding the capital for the production line they need
estimator7292 24 hours ago [-]
It would take 5-10 years to design and verify a RAM design that comes anywhere close to the performance of modern day memory. Plus millions in NRE.
coldtea 24 hours ago [-]
Why, is the idea that they would be starting from scratch, inventing it from first principles?
superb_dev 23 hours ago [-]
I would guess patents. If you don’t get the rights for an for an existing design, you need to build your own from the ground up
varispeed 23 hours ago [-]
So if they start now, they'll be immune to shortages in 5-10 years.
It's a no brainer.
coldtea 23 hours ago [-]
They'd have their own design in 5-10 years.
Immune to shortages no. They're not suffering shortages because they don't have their own design, they suffer shortages because the whole supply chain has issues, starting from required minerals and going all the way to shipping.
And like the final product (commercial RAM) now goes to AI which pays better, processes/materials/factory utilization to make RAM would continue to go to another industry and not Apple, if that pays better then.
There's some really wild patents on some wild systems architectures here, spanning 2021 to 2024. A lot of this can definitely go into an Ultra like design, but there's definitely broader possibilities here, that I expect they're now working furiously on. https://bsky.app/profile/ogawa-tadashi.bsky.social/post/3mif...
It's just so hard for me to come to terms with what a post-consumer Apple would be like! The Ultra chips are the mini-computers to the mainframe, and in this arena, they need to scale up and move upmarket and I cannot imagine how weird it would be to be an Apple that is so torn like that: that is still the worlds favorite consumer computing, but that also is selling mini-data-center like things, at phenomenal price.
Eventually if component prices ever settle that will be a commanding position to be in, to sell widely from, to have architecture for: but for the next half decade? A torn Apple.
MacOS X runs pretty well in 4GB of RAM and the build quality matters more. /s
It feels much more like cartel behaviour, where all the players recognized blame can be redirected to "Ai demand" and "Sam Altman secret deal"
I'd buy one or two but I can't stick them in a Colo because they don't have LOM or dual power supplies but I've been seriously thinking about buying one and just keeping it at home and having my Colo servers talking to it for local deepseek.
Not a high priority though considering how cheap deepseek is.
You can clearly see this in the shot of the Mini mobo: CPU/GPU ASIC with 2 separate ram chips packaged next to them: https://cdn.wccftech.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Mac-mini...
The ram is soldered onto the SoC in close proximity to the main arm chip. What’s different is that it is simultaneously addressable by cpu and gpu cores, not part of the same die as the apple silicon unit.
So they don't have to stop producing machines entirely because they've run out of RAM chips. The problem they have is with supply not demand.
Still LPDDR
It's absolutely wild that Apple's desktop machines now cap out at less ram than their portables which can't sustain an intensive workload without throttling!
In fact, chips were kept under lock and key to prevent theft. But there was a massive theft there were 20,000 chips were stolen.
https://forums.atariage.com/topic/207245-secret-atari-dram-r...
It would surely be a smart move to support the right partner in quickly starting a new memory factory, precisely to Apple's specifications, in return for a long-term supply agreement? If Apple could secure their memory supply and at a lower cost than all of the their PC and phone competition, it would be hugely beneficial for them.
Can't be any more entrenched than CPUs, GPUs, and broadband chips, which Apple still designs.
And to be clear, the foundry space for CPUs/GPUs is not the same as for RAM, which is printed with much larger feature size in order to lower the costs.
Beyond this, memory isn't produced on leading end nodes, they're a few generations back as it is. For that matter, Intel isn't even near capacity and has/had plenty of opportunity to produce VRAM and SSD Storage, they got out of both as they became more commoditized.
To be clear here, Apple doesn't actually license any cores from ARM - they've got an architectural license and implement their own cores. Licenses for cores are a different thing.
Production is not trivial, but can be outsourced to several parties.
If Apple had the manufacturing capabilities then sure, but they would still be running into the same resource constraints for inputs that everyone else is having nowadays.
At the moment, there are no solutions only responses.
It's a no brainer.
Immune to shortages no. They're not suffering shortages because they don't have their own design, they suffer shortages because the whole supply chain has issues, starting from required minerals and going all the way to shipping.
And like the final product (commercial RAM) now goes to AI which pays better, processes/materials/factory utilization to make RAM would continue to go to another industry and not Apple, if that pays better then.