The Japan Times - AI gobbling up memory chips essential to gadget makers

EUR -
AED 4.27378
AFN 75.634231
ALL 96.586247
AMD 443.575266
ANG 2.083307
AOA 1067.018839
ARS 1704.232153
AUD 1.740882
AWG 2.072075
AZN 1.982734
BAM 1.954518
BBD 2.344063
BDT 142.216129
BGN 1.939361
BHD 0.438724
BIF 3447.737788
BMD 1.163597
BND 1.497105
BOB 8.05968
BRL 6.244099
BSD 1.163937
BTN 104.820263
BWP 15.615693
BYN 3.407865
BYR 22806.500387
BZD 2.340655
CAD 1.617627
CDF 2629.729547
CHF 0.932466
CLF 0.026527
CLP 1040.651764
CNY 8.118824
CNH 8.118975
COP 4320.65659
CRC 578.718013
CUC 1.163597
CUP 30.835319
CVE 110.778962
CZK 24.286019
DJF 206.794909
DKK 7.473126
DOP 74.100771
DZD 151.27696
EGP 54.948777
ERN 17.453954
ETB 180.947564
FJD 2.650034
FKP 0.866112
GBP 0.868149
GEL 3.124305
GGP 0.866112
GHS 12.479624
GIP 0.866112
GMD 86.106589
GNF 10171.001428
GTQ 8.924071
GYD 243.459303
HKD 9.070088
HNL 30.69161
HRK 7.537204
HTG 152.428733
HUF 385.811563
IDR 19604.688816
ILS 3.663049
IMP 0.866112
INR 105.088805
IQD 1524.312016
IRR 49016.522061
ISK 147.230372
JEP 0.866112
JMD 184.309137
JOD 0.825036
JPY 183.876832
KES 150.046275
KGS 101.748995
KHR 4673.914945
KMF 491.62413
KPW 1047.264157
KRW 1698.584378
KWD 0.357841
KYD 0.96986
KZT 594.540124
LAK 25158.394001
LBP 104221.108025
LKR 359.804055
LRD 208.912106
LSL 19.261869
LTL 3.4358
LVL 0.703849
LYD 6.31286
MAD 10.748006
MDL 19.726979
MGA 5396.438038
MKD 61.577859
MMK 2443.56753
MNT 4142.29587
MOP 9.345431
MRU 46.413364
MUR 54.352054
MVR 17.978013
MWK 2018.067958
MXN 20.927222
MYR 4.763189
MZN 74.365921
NAD 19.261869
NGN 1658.649723
NIO 42.831729
NOK 11.75493
NPR 167.712021
NZD 2.031257
OMR 0.447408
PAB 1.163832
PEN 3.914216
PGK 4.965722
PHP 68.979236
PKR 325.787062
PLN 4.214141
PYG 7701.949362
QAR 4.242818
RON 5.087949
RSD 117.356943
RUB 91.9238
RWF 1696.280357
SAR 4.363557
SBD 9.45642
SCR 16.318058
SDG 699.907848
SEK 10.714186
SGD 1.497881
SHP 0.872999
SLE 28.046953
SLL 24400.050686
SOS 664.999923
SRD 44.438976
STD 24084.107749
STN 24.483839
SVC 10.183278
SYP 12868.88771
SZL 19.256207
THB 36.560646
TJS 10.835248
TMT 4.072589
TND 3.407266
TOP 2.801663
TRY 50.180356
TTD 7.899786
TWD 36.771879
TZS 2906.087626
UAH 50.199166
UGX 4190.252196
USD 1.163597
UYU 45.310093
UZS 14092.698002
VES 378.148835
VND 30567.6921
VUV 140.649398
WST 3.229498
XAF 655.524316
XAG 0.014612
XAU 0.000259
XCD 3.144679
XCG 2.097516
XDR 0.814859
XOF 655.524316
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.460117
ZAR 19.210292
ZMK 10473.773114
ZMW 22.549116
ZWL 374.677746
  • CMSC

    -0.0160

    22.994

    -0.07%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    4.6200

    82.65

    +5.59%

  • GSK

    0.4400

    50.66

    +0.87%

  • NGG

    0.7700

    80.25

    +0.96%

  • AZN

    0.9700

    94.98

    +1.02%

  • BTI

    1.0100

    54.8

    +1.84%

  • RIO

    -2.8800

    81.31

    -3.54%

  • CMSD

    0.1500

    23.65

    +0.63%

  • BP

    0.0350

    34.165

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.1050

    23.645

    -0.44%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    81.57

    0%

  • JRI

    0.0210

    13.761

    +0.15%

  • RYCEF

    0.2000

    17.35

    +1.15%

  • VOD

    -0.2600

    13.56

    -1.92%

  • RELX

    0.6800

    43.03

    +1.58%

AI gobbling up memory chips essential to gadget makers
AI gobbling up memory chips essential to gadget makers / Photo: Caroline Brehman - AFP

AI gobbling up memory chips essential to gadget makers

As devices from toys to cars get smarter at the Consumer Electronics Show, gadget makers are grappling with a shortage of memory and storage needed for them to work.

Text size:

Dwindling supplies and soaring costs of Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM) that provides space for computers, smartphones, and game consoles to run applications or multitask was a hot topic behind the scenes at the annual gadget extravaganza in Las Vegas.

Once cheap and plentiful, DRAM -- along with memory chips to simply store data -- are in short supply because demand spiked by AI in everything from data centers to wearable devices.

"Everybody is screaming for more supply...they just can't find enough," Sangyeun Cho, who is responsible for Samsung Electronics' semiconductor business in the US, told AFP.

"And AI demand is still mounting."

DRAM and memory chip makers have shifted manufacturing capacity to cater to AI data centers.

Meanwhile, AI features being added to all kinds of products have increased the need for DRAM and memory in devices from laptops to smart rings.

The global semiconductor ecosystem is facing an unprecedented memory chip shortage that could persist well into next year, according to market tracker IDC.

"What began as an AI infrastructure boom has now rippled outward, with tightening memory supply, inflating prices, and reshaping product and pricing strategies across both consumer and enterprise devices," IDC analysts said in a blog post.

"For consumers and enterprises alike, this signals the end of an era of cheap, abundant memory and storage."

Costs of computers, drives and memory cards have already risen for consumers, according to Other World Computing founder and chief Larry O'Connor.

- Sniff not bark -

Gadget makers are adapting to the shortage by either paying premiums for DRAM and memory, redesigning their products, or foregoing some features, according to Michal Siwinski of Arteris, which specializes in providing connectivity inside chips.

"Maybe the (robotic) dog you'll get will sniff around and roll over, but it's not going to bark a serenade because it doesn't have enough memory," Siwinski said.

The shortage is already forcing efficiencies such as engineers writing tighter code to provide performance using less memory, according to O'Connor.

"These aren't bad things; they should have already happened," O'Connor said.

"The entire industry has been built around cheap software that has become very bloated over the last 20 years."

However, gadget makers must avoid their products underperforming due to memory compromises or pushing prices up too high by paying dearly for components, warned Techsponential analyst Avi Greengart.

"Here at CES we're still seeing the usual claims that our thing is the best and damn the RAM cost," Greengart said on the show floor.

"However, if you spend time in suites talking to (device makers), retailers and component manufacturers you get a very different story."

That story is that modifications will be made to keep prices in line with consumer expectations, according to Greengart.

- AI silicon next? -

The shortage vexing memory chips is being watched warily by other sectors, particularly companies that rely on semiconductors needed to power AI.

These powerful semiconductors and analog parts have "nothing to do" with DRAM, but companies are vigilant for any spillover effects, Infineon Technologies chief executive Jochen Hanebeck told AFP.

German semiconductor titan Infineon specializes in powering AI, a market where the amount of computing taking place is expected to continue rocketing.

"Customers are asking about capacities, and I think they have seen the lessons learned on DRAM, and that's why they are very mindful," said Hanebeck.

"There is a good chance for a shortage; it is a real challenge to manage that supply chain."

K.Tanaka--JT