Making RAM at Home [video]

(youtube.com)

159 points | by kaipereira 1 day ago

12 comments

  • readitalready 1 hour ago
    I only buy free-range artisanal DRAM at the DRAM farmer's market.
    • intothemild 5 minutes ago
      I only have raw RAM, pastured RAM is wrong.

      I get my DRAM needs at the RAM ranch.

  • LPisGood 2 hours ago
    I saw this video yesterday and considered posting it, but I wasn’t sure if it was appropriate for HN.

    This channel has another video where it shows how the clean room lab is created starting from a basic backyard shed, and that was truly astounding. The positive pressure to keep the number of particles low in someone’s backyard is almost mystical to me.

    • vlovich123 1 hour ago
      You’re not sure if someone building a RAM clean room in a shed is appropriate for HackerNews, literally “news for nerds”? A dictionary purchase may be warranted
      • LPisGood 1 hour ago
        I think he plans to go far beyond just making RAM in that clean room. This is pure speculation, but I suspect the goal of that channel is to just make doom from scratch.

        Given that the shed in this guy’s backyard is already approaching the entire national technological output of any country in the 1970s I think he may get there.

      • kstrauser 1 hour ago
        Agree with the sentiment, but “news for nerds” is Slashdot.
        • midnitewarrior 17 minutes ago
          Their standard is higher than that, "Stuff that matters."
        • SkinTaco 1 hour ago
          Slashdot still exists?
          • kstrauser 1 hour ago
            Well, “exists” is a pretty broad spectrum.
      • fragmede 58 minutes ago
        Yeah but it's a YouTube video. Those tend not to do super well on the front page.
    • saganus 1 hour ago
      If you haven't seen this one, I highly recommend it:

      Indistinguishable From Magic: Manufacturing Modern Computer Chips

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NGFhc8R_uO4&t=2070s

      It's quite old but I think there is no modern version of it.

      I've tried posting to HN a few times but it hasn't gained traction for some reason, but I find it absolutely mind blowing.

    • anitil 1 hour ago
      I think if it's interesting to you then it's worth posting, and letting the voting system do it's thing. I only rarely post because by the time I've seen something it's usually already been posted
    • duskdozer 1 hour ago
      Tbh this is exactly the sort of thing I'd come here to see
    • waterTanuki 2 hours ago
      Recently I saw a post about Bonsai trees on the front page. Making your own RAM is 100% more relevant to HN than quite a few posts I see on the main page.
  • p0w3n3d 1 hour ago

      1999. We will have flying cars
      2024. LLMs - there will be robots
      2026. How to make your own RAM
  • jukkan 52 minutes ago
    "There is no DownloadMoreRAM, it's just some guy in a backyard shed."

    https://downloadmoreram.com/

    • treebeard901 22 minutes ago
      With memory prices what they are maybe there is a business opportunity for a return of SoftRAM 95
  • readitalready 1 hour ago
    Backyard semiconductor production is pretty similar to backyard barbecue. Lots of heating, smoking (diffusion), injecting (ion implant), and layering..
  • Rendello 1 day ago
    I wasn't expecting what the inside of the shed would be like!
    • JuniperMesos 16 minutes ago
      There's another video on YouTube by the same guy detailing how he built his backyard clean room shed. I was kind of surprised at how easy it was - it's definitely a construction project that requires some specialized knowledge, but the fact that it's tractable at all for one person with a shed is pretty amazing to me.
  • dlcarrier 1 day ago
    This guy is proof that newcomers to YouTube can still succeed, if they find the right niche.
  • debo_ 2 hours ago
    Mom: We have RAM at home!

    RAM at home:

  • jandhdhshhh 1 hour ago
    This is incredible! 1100 degrees in your backyard shed! And the video explains it well too
  • schmeichel 2 hours ago
    Subscribed. Genuinely looking forward to what this gent gets up to.
  • kennywinker 1 hour ago
    Nobody tell openai about this, they’ll buy up all his stock
  • CamperBob2 2 hours ago
    Spoiler: we never actually get to see the RAM tested
    • eichin 1 hour ago
      The graphs towards the end were discharge curves for a single transistor/capacitor cell out of only 16 present, if I understood correctly? So "enough cells to count as memory" and "addressing logic" are definitely future work (it looked like he wanted to characterize what the refresh cycle would have to look like before actually building more.) I was kind of surprised that the "use a microscope as a photolithography projector" approach worked at all, it will be interesting to see how that scales up...
      • denkmoon 1 hour ago
        2 bytes of memory ought to be enough for anyone!
        • josephg 16 minutes ago
          The Atari 2600 only had 128 bytes of ram. It’s not that far off…