People are getting their ddr5 systems.
There is no point releasing the Royal DDR style at the end of the lifespan or even midway through because it will be obsolete and dumped to upgrade to the following generation almost immediately. No one will get it because they will look ahead to next generation. This is how ddr4 Royal was released. At the end or midway through, making it obsolete.
I do not accept, "we can't give out information generic answers" in relation to the Royal or other ram styles release plans. You either give it out and do a plan, or no one is interested and it's pointless.
The marketing team literally have no idea what they are talking about releasing the Royal style and reducing the potential buyers by 60-99% for no reason.
Can someone from marketing justify this behaviour? No one going into ddr5 is going to get it after they bought ddr5 premium ram to upgrade. They will do so only if it's released early. Early adopters that help invest in the tech also get punished by these marketers, and early adopters are purportedly supposed to be respected.
There is no point releasing the Royal DDR style at the end of the lifespan or even midway through because it will be obsolete and dumped to upgrade to the following generation almost immediately. No one will get it because they will look ahead to next generation. This is how ddr4 Royal was released. At the end or midway through, making it obsolete.
I do not accept, "we can't give out information generic answers" in relation to the Royal or other ram styles release plans. You either give it out and do a plan, or no one is interested and it's pointless.
The marketing team literally have no idea what they are talking about releasing the Royal style and reducing the potential buyers by 60-99% for no reason.
Can someone from marketing justify this behaviour? No one going into ddr5 is going to get it after they bought ddr5 premium ram to upgrade. They will do so only if it's released early. Early adopters that help invest in the tech also get punished by these marketers, and early adopters are purportedly supposed to be respected.
Comment