Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Waiting for memory prices to drop? Intel CEO says the shortage isn’t easing anytime soon

AI demand is tightening memory supply, and Intel doesn't expect relief until at least 2028.

Add as a preferred source on Google
GPU RAM SSD on table
Martin Katler / Unsplash

If you’ve been waiting for the global memory shortage to ease anytime this year and hardware prices to drop, Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan has some bad news. Speaking at a recent Cisco Systems conference, Tan said the crunch will likely last at least two more years.

According to Bloomberg, Tan cited information from two key players in the memory space who reportedly told him, “There’s no relief until 2028.” The timeline aligns with recent comments from Micron’s Christopher Moore, VP of Marketing for its Mobile and Client Business Unit, who said tight supply conditions are likely to linger for the foreseeable future.

Recommended Videos

The prolonged shortage is being driven largely by the explosive growth of AI infrastructure, which is soaking up memory at an unprecedented scale. With memory manufacturers increasingly focused on serving data centers and AI workloads, supply for consumer devices is being squeezed. For buyers, that could mean paying more for laptops, phones, PC components, and even TVs.

AI demand could keep your next hardware upgrade expensive

Nvidia’s next wave of AI hardware could make the situation even worse. According to Tan, the company’s latest Rubin platform will drive demand even higher. AI is going to “suck up a lot of memory,” Tan said, which could further tighten supply for consumer electronics.

For consumers, this means the pressure on hardware pricing is unlikely to ease anytime soon. Devices may continue to ship with higher price tags or more modest memory configurations unless memory supply expands significantly or demand from AI infrastructure slows. Until then, buyers may need to plan upgrades carefully or hold onto existing hardware longer than usual.

Pranob Mehrotra
Pranob is a seasoned tech journalist with over eight years of experience covering consumer technology. His work has been…
AMD’s latest Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 pushes X3D to the limit
Dual 3D V-Cache, higher power, and a focus on enthusiast performance
AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 FEatured

AMD has unveiled what might be its most extreme desktop CPU yet, the Ryzen 9 9950X3D2. And it’s going all-in on one thing: cache.

https://twitter.com/jackhuynh/status/2037159705395491033?s=20

Read more
Next-gen AI breakthrough promises chatbots that can read the room better
Researchers are teaching AI chatbots to read between the lines
Generative AI

Have you ever asked a chatbot something and felt like it completely missed your point? You say something with a bit of nuance, and the AI misses the subtlety entirely. That is exactly the problem researchers are trying to solve.

Even though the emotional connection with AI can feel deeper than human conversation for many users, most AI systems today still treat a sentence as a single block of sentiment. If you mix praise and criticism, the nuance often gets lost.

Read more
ChatGPT is not getting an erotic mode, after all
OpenAI pulls back as “adult mode” runs into bigger concerns
ChatGPT-to-rollback-to-friendly-and-adulttt

If you were expecting ChatGPT to get an “erotic mode,” that idea is officially off the table. According to Financial Times, OpenAI’s spicy mode is on hold “indefinitely.”

Inside OpenAI's struggle to bring the adult mode to life

Read more