With the continued proliferation of routers, switches and HDTV technology etc, we'll still be seeing RDRAM around for the forseable future. Although Rambus's PC market has shrunk, it continues to be one of the top ten fastest growing companies. Serial memory technology is the future. It's too fast to be ignored and unlike DDR SDRAM, it's latency decreases as it's speed increases. The market's just not ready for it yet. For right now, the workstation market will become the domain of Dual Channel DDR. DC DDR will also become the primary choice of desktops as well taking over where Single Channel DDR leaves off. RDRAM will become a niche market among computer enthusiasts for now. Remember this: Once Barton is released and combined with the N-force II motherboard, you're gonna see some gnashing of teeth until Prescott arrives.