On 6/16/20 5:17 PM, Nigel Johnson via cctalk wrote: > I remember that shortage of memory chips. People in my office were all > blaming it the Ayatollah Khomeni!
The running battle between "dumping" and supply. By 1980, Japan owned about half the world's DRAM market and US domestic producers were leaving the business. It was an interesting time in Silicon Valley; companies lost DRAM inventory due to pilferage and outright burglary. One outfit who'd carefully laid in a big stock of AT&T-manufactured DRAMs found their parts crib empty of the things. Some started storing them in vaults and there was at least one incident of a supply truck hijacking. One of the other problems was that Japan was scaling up its production; there wasn't enough domestic demand to justify expansion, so dumping was an obvious answer. And the Japanese DRAMs were *good*. I still have some NEC 416 DRAM here that we tested with a refresh rate of 2 seconds--that's seconds, not milliseconds. After all, who's going to argue with someone selling Porsche 911s right of the boat for $1500 each? But we'd seen what happened to the US TV manufacturing market in the 70s--it simply couldn't compete with offshore production. Gone were the Zeniths, the Packard-Bells and the Curtis-Mathes in a few years. Things really came to a head when Korea entered the business. At that time (1985 or so), I think the only US manufacturers of DRAM were Intel and Micron. I think the US went a bit overboard on the anti-dumping duties. Hyundai set up a big plant for DRAM locally in the 1990s to get around anti-dumping penalties. The huge complex (1.2M square feet) has sat empty since 2008. It's been passed around by various companies (e.g. Broadcom) as a white elephant. The current owner paid $6.3 million for it in an auction. Heaven knows what will become of it; no one seems to know. --Chuck