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Xbox’s expensive expansion cards are likely about to get a bit cheaper

Microsoft is seemingly working with new manufacturers on additional storage expansion card options for Xbox Series X/S.

As spotted by The Verge, a since-deleted listing on Best Buy’s U.S. website showed a 1TB Western Digital expansion card priced at $179.99 USD ($242 CAD). For context, this is $40 USD ($53.85 CAD) cheaper than the $219.99 USD ($296.05 CAD) 1TB model offered by Seagate, the only company to currently produce Xbox’s current-gen expansion cards.

In Canada, the official pricing for Seagate’s 1TB card is $289.99. It’s unclear what the Canadian pricing for Western Digital’s 1TB card would be.

Since launching in November 2020, the Xbox Series X/S have only supported Seagate’s pricey expansion cards. Given that current-gen games take up increasingly large portions of console storage space, this has left Xbox consumers with few options. Outside of buying the expansion cards, your only alternatives are to delete games when possible or use Xbox Cloud Gaming to stream titles without the need for downloads.

It remains to be seen when Xbox and Western Digital will formally unveil the new expansion cards.

Image credit: Xbox

Via: The Verge

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Western Digital lost 6.5 billion gigabytes of NAND chips, prices likely to spike

Unfortunately for tech enthusiasts, computer prices may jump again in the coming months. Thanks to contamination at NAND production facilities, the cost of storage components could spike as much as 10 percent.

According to The Verge, Western Digital reported it lost at least 6.5 exabytes (or 6.5 billion gigabytes) of flash storage due to the NAND contamination issues. NAND is a core component in storage devices like solid-state drives (SSDs). The Verge cited information from market research firm TrendForce about the potential jump in prices.

In short, consumers should expect NAND shortages and price fluctuations to hit the PC market over the next few months. Given the PC market is already straining under chip shortages and high demand for GPUs (which have also seen prices skyrocket), it could soon be even more expensive to build, upgrade, or buy a computer.

It appears the contamination was detected in January at two plants in Japan. Western Digital’s joint venture partner, Kioxia (formerly Toshiba), revealed the contamination affected BiCS 3D NAND flash memory.

Western Digital and Kioxia account for around 30 percent of the NAND flash market, according to TrendForce, and both companies primarily supply SSD and eMMC storage drives for PCs. Moreover, 9to5Mac reported that Kioxia provides NAND chips for various Apple products, including the iPhone 13, the M1 Pro and Max MacBook Pros, and the iPad Pro.

It remains unclear what caused the contamination and whether it will lead to recalls for products already on the market. It’s also unclear when production will resume. Western Digital said it was working closely with Kioxia to “implement necessary measures that will restore the facilities to normal operational status as quickly as possible.”

Image credit: Western Digital

Source: The Verge