what if ram buyout is part of a greater attack on personal computing

any other indicators?

#mann_vs_machine

the pattern would be: make personal computing expensive, complicated, and unnecessary while making cloud dependence cheap, simple, and required. whether coordinated or emergent, the trajectory is similar - computing power migrating from personal ownership to rental access.

possible indicators:

hardware consolidation:

* RAM concentrated in data centers, not consumer hands

* repair parts increasingly scarce or locked down (right-to-repair battles)

* custom silicon (M-series, Snapdragon X) that's harder to upgrade or swap

* soldered components becoming standard even in "pro" machines

software centralization:

* operating systems pushing cloud dependencies (win 11's ms account requirements, ChromeOS model)

* Adobe, Microsoft, AutoCAD all shifted to subscription models requiring internet validation

* local AI models possible but corporations pushing API-dependent solutions

* progressive web apps replacing locally-run software

knowledge degradation:

* fewer people learning to build PCs or understand their machines

* tech education shifting from "how computers work" to "how to use apps"

* repair culture dying as devices become unrepairable black boxes

* documentation and schematics increasingly proprietary

economic pressure:

* hobbyist computing priced out (current RAM situation)

* home servers becoming impractical vs cloud services

* development tools increasingly cloud-based (GitHub codespaces, cloud IDEs)

honestly, all fairly weak and circumnavigable indicators, but also possibly a death by a thousand cuts.

on the other hand, videogames. a lot more going on for PC. valve's healing influence. is cloud gaming a serious force by now? doubtful.

possible deliberate future attack vectors:

SSD controller chips - a "sudden shortage" would be catastrophic. if NAND controllers became scarce or prohibitively expensive, it would force cloud storage dependence overnight. people couldn't even backup locally anymore.

PSUs - capacitor or transformer supply "disruption" would halt all PC building.

BIOS/UEFI firmware - a "security crisis" requiring signed firmware. approved vendors only or nothing boots

CPU microcode "security patches" - a discovered "fundamental flaw" requiring always-online validation to boot. turns every processor into a subscription service. precedent already exists with Intel Management Engine and AMD PSP.

ethernet/network chips - if networking hardware became scarce or required licensing/authentication.

discrete GPU extinction - already happening organically, but accelerated scarcity would eliminate any serious computing, gaming, or AI work on personal machines.

the most elegant attack would combine legitimate security concerns with artificial scarcity.
i sure would hate it if open source were the eli sunday whose milkshake will be drunk

the plot thickens

"Jeff Bezos said the quiet part out loud — hopes that you'll give up your PC to rent one from the cloud"
https://www.windowscentral.com/artificial-intelligence/jeff-bezos-says-the-quiet-part-out-loud-bezos-envisions-that-youll-give-up-your-pc-for-an-ai-cloud-version

#mann_vs_machine

Jeff Bezos said the quiet part out loud — hopes that you'll give up your PC to rent one from the cloud

Amazon's Jeff Bezos once revealed how he thinks of local PC hardware as antiquated, ready to be replaced by cloud options. Will DRAM prices make it come true?

Windows Central

the plot gains further viscosity

"Western Digital is already sold out of hard drives for all of 2026 — chief says some long-term agreements for 2027 and 2028 already in place"

https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/hdds/western-digital-is-already-sold-out-of-hard-drives-for-all-of-2026-chief-says-some-long-term-agreements-for-2027-and-2028-already-in-place

#mann_vs_machine

Western Digital is already sold out of hard drives for all of 2026 — chief says some long-term agreements for 2027 and 2028 already in place

Will HDDs follow RAM and SSDs when it comes to price increases?

Tom's Hardware
@lritter States need to realise that some things are actually strategic resources, including the whole supply chain and support for those systems.
@toerror states can not help us anymore. this is a home alone scenario.
@lritter Home alone, but it's in the world of the Truman Show.
@toerror they both have good endings.
@lritter Vivarium then ;-)
@toerror :blobsweats:
@toerror imo it's already close enough to h.g.wells' The Time Machine, which is already about class war and self-inflicted infantility