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Hardware Exchange Platform Links

Sell RAM: An exchange and purchasing service for server, desktop, and laptop memory, including DDR3, DDR4, DDR5, ECC, RDIMM, and enterprise server RAM modules.

 

Sell CPU: A hardware buyback service for desktop, workstation, and server processors, including Intel Core, Intel Xeon, AMD Ryzen, and AMD EPYC CPUs.

 

Sell GPU: A trading service for gaming, workstation, and AI accelerators, including NVIDIA GeForce, RTX, Tesla, A100, H100, and AMD Radeon and Instinct GPUs.

 

Sell SSD: An asset recovery service for enterprise and consumer storage devices, including NVMe, SATA, SAS, M.2, U.2 SSDs, and traditional hard drives.

 

Sell Test Equipment: A purchasing service for laboratory and electronic test instruments, including oscilloscopes, signal analyzers, network analyzers, power supplies, and measurement equipment.

 

Sell Networking Equipment: A buyback service for enterprise networking hardware, including switches, routers, firewalls, access points, and telecom equipment.

 

Sell Apple Devices: An exchange service for Apple products, including iPhone, iPad, MacBook, iMac, Mac Studio, and other Apple hardware.

 

Sell Laptops & Tablets: A purchasing service for business and consumer laptops, tablets, workstations, and portable computing devices.

 

Sell Smartphones: A trade-in service for unlocked and carrier devices, including iPhone, Samsung Galaxy, Google Pixel, and other smartphones.

DRAM and NAND prices are still rising in mid-2026, but buyers are starting to balk

 

An analyst note in early June called a mid-2026 peak for DRAM and NAND prices, and it made headlines. The actual market data is more interesting. Conventional DRAM contract prices rose 93–98% in Q1 and are still rising in Q2 — but spot buyers have started balking at higher quotes, and NAND spot trading has gone quiet. The first sign of strain isn't falling prices. It's fading demand.

 

 

Server CPU prices are still climbing in mid-2026, and more hikes are already signaled

 

Memory got the headlines, but server CPUs are running the same playbook a few months behind. Prices up 10–20% since March, average lead times stretched from 2 weeks to 8–12 (worse on popular SKUs), and both Intel and AMD signaling more increases in H2. This piece pulls the channel data into one table and looks at what it means for anyone holding Xeon or EPYC inventory — values on pulled processors track shortages like this with a lag.

 

 

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