Given that competition continues to drive prices down, would 'secure ram' be viable? would you pay more for it?
It's funny you mention this, since the problem only affects newer DDR3 and DDR4 modules and older RAM (EDO modules are apparently still in limited production and being sold) does tend to be significantly more expensive. Unfortunately the rest of the hardware needs to be compatible.
This also means all the older hardware that gets scrapped in massive quantities daily is likely to contain RAM immune to this problem, which is somewhat ironic... maybe it's just a (sad) continuation of the "newer is more volatile" trend that can be traced back to thousand-year-old stone tablets which remain readable today.
Not stone, but clay tablets are probably more volatile than your USB drive. There's a huge sampling bias here.
About the main point, why isn't ECC fixing this for everybody? I'll surely get cheaper, more volatile RAM, and use some of it on redundancy so it works better than the more expensive, less volatile kind.
It's funny you mention this, since the problem only affects newer DDR3 and DDR4 modules and older RAM (EDO modules are apparently still in limited production and being sold) does tend to be significantly more expensive. Unfortunately the rest of the hardware needs to be compatible.
This also means all the older hardware that gets scrapped in massive quantities daily is likely to contain RAM immune to this problem, which is somewhat ironic... maybe it's just a (sad) continuation of the "newer is more volatile" trend that can be traced back to thousand-year-old stone tablets which remain readable today.