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by samatman 1404 days ago
The RAM on these chips is integrating, making your statement not-even-wrong.

Furthermore, price matters when comparing price to performance, not when, say, nerfing a benchmark by running one chip with twice as much RAM.

1 comments

> The RAM on these chips is integrating,

This statement is not even wrong, in the sense that it is nonsensical. If you intended to say that the RAM is integrated on chip, that is incorrect. Apple marketing made that statement early on, but teardowns very clearly show that the RAM is soldered on package, not on integrated on chip. This is still a leap forward in power from other common devices, but a much smaller one than integrating the RAM on the chip.

Furthermore, the RAM on M2 is bog-standard SK Hynix LPDDR5. 2x 32gbit chips for the 8GB model, 2x 64gbit for the 16GB model, and 2x 96gbit for the 24GB model. I can buy the exact same chips that are used in 16GB Macbook Air for ~$70 each, and I am not Apple.

If the SKUs had the same level of markup, the price difference between 8GB and 16GB would be less than $50.

> I can buy the exact same chips that are used in 16GB Macbook Air for ~$70 each, and I am not Apple.

Makes me think of licensed trades. Anything a plumber or electrician installs for me will be significantly marked up from what I could buy it for myself.