iPod Popularity Creates NAND Memory Shortfall

By

post-18157-image-f0929ccdaa8ba057e9dfcdf742d90b97-jpg
Used with a CC-license. Thanks to Donna & Andrew on Flickr.

It seems everywhere you look – on the street, on television and online – another iPod or iPhone is being produced or sold. Supply of flash memory has hit a 1.3 percent shortfall and is expected to drop to 3.3 percent below demand during the important Christmas period. Once again the blame is being laid at Apple’s doorstep.

“NAND flash supply has reportedly become tighter as major chip producers Samsung Electronics, Toshiba, Micron and Hynix Semiconductor favor demand for Apple devices,” DigiTimes writes on a report from DRAMeXchange.

This isn’t the first time Apple has been blamed for a shortage in NAND memory. In September a “serious shortage” of flash memory was reported, causing makers to curtail production to everyone but Apple. At the same time, Apple unveiled new flash-based iPods, including a 64GB iPod touch and an updated iPod nano with video ability.


Become accustom to these shortages, according to the report. Although demand for flash memory is expected to grow 81 percent in 2010 because of increased smartphone purchases, supply will only grow by 79 percent.

With shortages comes higher memory prices. The contract price for 16GB flash chips rose 7-8 percent in the first half of October while 32GB chips increased by 8-14%. As more and more iPods and iPhones make use of 64GB NAND chips, the price of that memory increased 6-13 percent.

As a result of the shortages, memory module makers are looking to other sources beyond Samsung. IM Flash, a joint venture between Micron and Intel could benefit from the move, the report suggests.

[Via Apple Insider and DigiTimes]

Newsletters

Daily round-ups or a weekly refresher, straight from Cult of Mac to your inbox.

  • The Weekender

    The week's best Apple news, reviews and how-tos from Cult of Mac, every Saturday morning. Our readers say: "Thank you guys for always posting cool stuff" -- Vaughn Nevins. "Very informative" -- Kenly Xavier.