NEMIX slaps $70K price tag on 4TB DDR5, servers feel the burn

A company is selling a four-terabyte memory kit for more than a new car. NEMIX listed a 4TB DDR5 ECC RDIMM kit costing over seventy thousand dollars. This bundle includes sixteen individual 256GB modules built for servers and serious workstations. The memory operates at 6400 MT/s with a CAS latency of 52. It uses a registered design and full error correcting code for data integrity in critical systems.

These modules employ a complex four rank by four configuration to achieve their huge capacity. They still run at the normal DDR5 voltage of 1.1 volts. This helps manage power draw inside packed server racks. The listed price breaks down to about seventeen dollars per gigabyte, which is massively higher than consumer RAM.

Big buyers like cloud companies and government agencies probably get major discounts off that sticker price. Such extreme memory is meant for massive jobs like AI model training or giant in-memory databases. It also works for servers hosting huge numbers of virtual machines. For these uses, reliability and raw capacity matter much more than the initial cost. This product shows the huge gap between the enterprise and consumer memory markets.
 

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