Micron just made the most advanced DRAM ever produced in the US, and it's not for your PC

Alfonso Maruccia

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In context: Micron Technology is one of the "Big Three" companies in memory chip manufacturing alongside Samsung and SK Hynix. The US-based company is now making significant investments to expand its domestic manufacturing capabilities, starting with "advanced" DRAM products designed to serve the needs of several non-IT industries.

Micron is introducing its 1α (1-alpha) DRAM memory technology to the US, bringing "home" an advanced manufacturing process that should deliver significant improvements in industrial memory chips. The company recently announced the expansion of its Manassas, Virginia facility, where the node will be used to ramp up DDR4 wafer production.

Micron said 1-alpha DRAM is the most advanced memory technology ever manufactured in the US, although the company already uses the process elsewhere in the world. The node is built on a fourth-generation 10nm-class DRAM process, Micron explained and provides a 40% increase in memory density compared to the previous-generation 1z DRAM node.

While newer nodes such as 1β (1-beta) and 1γ (1-gamma) have already been introduced, 1-alpha is still well suited for certain memory products. Micron plans to sell the new chips to automotive manufacturers and defense and aerospace contractors, as well as industrial, networking, and medical device makers. Predictably, PC manufacturers are not included in Micron's target list and are not expected to benefit from the Manassas fab expansion.

The Virginia facility appears to be particularly important for the automotive industry. Micron highlights how the plant specializes in 300mm NAND, DRAM, and NOR products, with half of the cars on US roads using a chip produced in Virginia. Furthermore, the plant accounts for around 2% of global memory production.

The 1-alpha technology should provide long-term support for critical US industries, adding new manufacturing capabilities alongside other Micron facilities in Boise, Idaho, and Clay, New York. The company is expected to reach "qualified" 1-alpha DRAM production by the end of 2026, bringing its $2 billion investment to fruition and quadrupling DDR4 wafer capacity at the Manassas plant.

Micron is reportedly investing up to $200 billion to build a new competitive edge in US memory manufacturing. These funds include federal support such as the CHIPS and Science Act, which is why the company held a celebration in Virginia attended by both state and federal representatives.

Unlike Big Tech's more speculative plans for future AI data centers in the US, Micron's manufacturing expansion is expected to have a more tangible impact on local and national economies. The company expects to further expand its domestic chipmaking capabilities, creating a total of 90,000 jobs across Virginia, Idaho, and New York. Micron also plans to spend $325 million on workforce training, funding partnerships with community colleges and universities.

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Hopefully in 10 years, when I'm ready to upgrade my desktop again, things will be straightened out.

Because in the mean time... I can see a whole lot of people are just gonna be priced out of the market.

When DDR6 comes out, it'll be snapped up.

I'm not even thinking about being able to get a RTX 6090 or 7090.
 
With personal computing being marginalized, I may eventually need to develop a social life to compensate. Let's hope it never comes to that. I have backup plans in place to mitigate.
I have a social life, it exists in EvE and ESO.....luckily my current rig can play both of those just fine at 4k120 so im in no hurry to upgrade. I do want to get a 4k120 projector to play EvE on, but that's a whole other story.
 
Not surprising that Micron no longer cares about the PC market since they ditched their consumer facing brand, and their new fab won't help with any PC DRAM supply either.
Things keep on looking more bleak for the PC market, and none of the other RAM makers have no reason to supply the PC or the whole consumer tech market with any RAM.
If the AI bubble ever pops, it's going to take the rest of the economy with it because all of the tech bros decided to gamble entire companies on speculation, being worried about the next graphics card launch would be the last thing to be concerned over.
 
I doubt very much there will ever be a 7090 and even a 6090 is looking unlikely right now. Jensen has gone fully crackpot 'all hail the AI overlords' now.
His recent interviews remind me of cokeheads I see at the bar. Although I hope the 6090 exists because "nice"
 
I agree - it's a long fall from up there...
While I doubt he is "on drugs", he comes off as maybe being on a very high dose of Adderall and not having ADHD to balance it out. He certainly has enough money to doctor shop and many consider stimulants as a nootropic so I would not be surprised at all
 
After blowing of decades of dust, anyone up for a multiplayer Doom session? It plays great on my 486-33 with 32MB DRAM which is all I can afford now.
 
While I appreciate the coverage, this is Micron introducing a not-so-leading-edge manufacturing process to DDR4. DDR5 has already moved beyond this, and there is nothing to be gained for DDR5 (currently on 1-gamma / 6th gen process). I.e. this is not a new process, it's just new (and cheaper) for DDR4.

TL;DR: This is cheap, mass-produced, DRAM that fits a particular bill of consumer electronics/components, without being really relevant to the PC industry.
 
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