Darth Osm wrote:
Most interesting...
I wonder who is the original manufacturer...
Why is it that there is a hard time understaning their own product for these re-branders anyway?
Aside from the fact that they do not make the original product, that is.
This sort of thing seems strange to me for a business, but maybe it is because I expect more because of being with Apple for so long...
I was thinking of upgrading my RAM for awhile now. Does it matter if it's from OWC, you don't think they overcharge for them do you(the RAM modules)?
I think you'll find OWC's RAM prices are very competitive. For something of equal quality to compare to, checik out Crucial or Kingston for their prices. Note that there are only, literally, a handful of companies in the entire world who actually make RAM chips (Samsung being by far the biggest) so most of the brand name RAM being sold is actually one of those few companies RAM chips assembled onto modules for someone elses brand name (Crucial and Kingston also manufacture RAM btw). Often the only significant difference between say a Samsung SODIMM and some consumer brand X is the sticky label on the module (but then again, some resellers buy up low grade RAM in buld, stuff that works but failed to meet the specific engineering specs for a given OEM clients architecture, slap it on some modules under thier own brand and sell it at a discounted price).
Similarly, many "name brand" SSD modules sold to consumers as "brand X" actually are using memory chips from one of those same handful of memory chip manufacturers - they either assemble their own finished SSD modules, or contract a 3rd party to do that (China is full of companies who sell nothing under thier own corporate name, but merely assembling products under contract for retail brands).
Even Apple does not and has not actually manufactured anything for years - all they do is set the engineering specifications and tell their contract manufacturers to use components that meet or exceed those specs. Everything Apple sells is full of many of the same name brand components used in similar items sold by Dell, Lenovo, Sony, Toshiba, and so on.
The key thing is making sure that any component you buy is known to meet or exceed Apple's engineering specs, and to buy from a company and/or retailer who will stand by that product should it fail to work as advertised in your Apple product. Perfect example is buying Kingston's value RAM modules instead of their regular spec'd modules - Kingston guarantees their regular modules to meet or exceed Apple's design specifications, but their value RAM is not (it may or may not work in an Apple product, but it was not specifically tested to do so). My understanding of Kingstons value RAM is it starts life just like all their other RAM, but then it fails in testing to meet the specific engineering specs of an OEM design, so it ends up in the bargain catch-all "value" bin instead of in the guaranteed to meet specs bin(s) - seems most RAM is manufactured the same way, the final product's stamp of approval for a given OEM's machines is based on how it tests, not in how it was made.
One thing I do like about OWC RAM is they do actually test their guaranteed configurations themselves - so when they say such-and-such a module or configuration works in Apple models x, y, and z they have empirically determined them to do so.