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NetApp, Lenovo Raise Prices, Citing Thailand Flooding Effects

Lucas123 writes "First HP, then EMC, and now NetApp has hiked up the price of its hard disk drives by 5% to 15%. The vendors sent letters to users stating that the flooding in Thailand had caused major component shortages, and while they tried to absorb the supplier price increases, each had to eventually give in. Lenovo also announced it has run out of certain drives for its PC systems including some popular 7,200rpm models."

2 of 96 comments (clear)

  1. Re:I'm starting to wonder about this by beelsebob · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, they're seriously saying that a lot of production was there, and that if you take even 40% of production away, you still have major shortages. You don't build plants to produce nearly twice as many drives as there's demand for, just because it may be that some massive natural disaster comes along.

  2. Re:I'm starting to wonder about this by Hadlock · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Someone famously said that the distance between the platter and the read head is roughly equivilent to flying a 747 over Mt Everest with one inch to spare. It's not like joey and bubba can buy two pallets of platters, three pallets of drive cases, and a pallet of controller assemblies, a gallon of glue and assemble 20K drives in their garage over a weekend while burning through a pack of cigarettes. These aren't cuban sweat shop cigar factories, these devices are put together in enormous clean rooms with super tight tolerances.

    --
    moox. for a new generation.