HDDs and SSDs very likely. They can swap from SAS to SATA on a dime, and many of us can use used SAS drives. NAND for server SSDs are just binned and respec'd consumer NAND, and many people will have good uses for server SSDs at home and work.
RAM is a big question mark. Part of the RAM problem is that they are shifting types of RAM produced. Less normal DDR5, and more LPDDR5 types and HBM (HBM is physically huge, and low yield, and low power DDR5 is only soldered into main boards). If it takes into next year to burst the bubble, there will be production competition from DDR6, as well.
HDDs and SSDs very likely. They can swap from SAS to SATA on a dime, and many of us can use used SAS drives. NAND for server SSDs are just binned and respec'd consumer NAND, and many people will have good uses for server SSDs at home and work.
RAM is a big question mark. Part of the RAM problem is that they are shifting types of RAM produced. Less normal DDR5, and more LPDDR5 types and HBM (HBM is physically huge, and low yield, and low power DDR5 is only soldered into main boards). If it takes into next year to burst the bubble, there will be production competition from DDR6, as well.