One affect of the floods not yet reported in the local press: (mods pls move if better in Digital Forum)
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What you can do about soaring hard-drive prices
Floods in Thailand — and an ensuing worldwide purchasing panic — have pushed the price of hard drives to nosebleed heights and left us all with fewer choices.
Here’s what you need to know about the crisis, the fallout, and what you can do about it.
Have you tried to buy a hard drive in the past couple of weeks? I don’t know how things are in your neck of the woods, but out here the drive shortage is so bad you can’t find any internal drives on the store shelves. My friendly local computer shoppe won’t sell me an internal drive unless I buy a whole PC.
Moreover, the cost of hard drives is spiking, as if you were investing in the gold market. For example, 1TB drives are up to three times more expensive than they were just a month ago. Take a look at Figure 1, which tracks the price of a plain-vanilla 1TB Seagate Barracuda drive at Newegg over the past three months.
Just one month ago, that Seagate drive sold for U.S. $54.99. As of Nov. 10, it had jumped to $149.99. To add insult to injury, Newegg limits purchases to one of these drives (purchase page). Don’t believe it? Try updating your shopping cart with a quantity of two or more.
Although price spikes are not unusual when demand exceeds supply, this case is particularly remarkable. To understand why, let me explain what did — and didn't — happen in Thailand last month.
Full article here:
http://windowssecrets.com/top-story/wha ... ve-prices/