10 years ago I was using 16GB in my MBP and today it's 48GB. It's just a 3x increase during mostly a bonanza period.
And the Mac Studio was available with 512GB until ram got scarce and they cut the max in half recently.
There's plenty of demand for RAM right now. We'll see how this turns out.
It seems that a lot of PC building people are confused too deeply by Intel marketing and fixated on getting the flashiest CPU attainable within budget. Similar things happened with previous AI hype, and some people were using HDD boot drives on GPU rigs and asking others whether low end i7 would cut it. They acted very confused when told that they need SSD and Pentium is plentium.
I mean, there is a shortage going on, but when it'll be over anyhow - whether due to all the last three standing filing bankruptcy or CXMT-Huawei starts delivering in shiploads or Kioxia enters the market - and it comes back down to $2/GB, or even $5/GB, just max it out and forget about it for 10 years. Why not.
Because late stage capitalism demands endless growth in order to pay executives and shareholders (especially those late to the train) more and more YoY.
And those requirements for growth mean that cost cutting is needed. Over the past few decades cost _have_ been cut, building things more efficiently, components becoming cheaper, larger volumes in mass manufacturing.
But we have already reached a point where there are no other places to cut than the quality of the product itself. Look to shrinkflation in food and other places - look at how "live action" versions are being made of previously animated movies, how game franchises from 2 decades ago are being brought back from the dead, the huge influx of remasters etc.
Why? Because it's cheaper to revive/reuse an existing IP than it is to create a new one + it guarantees success with the drooling consumer masses. And cheaper = more Ferraris for the multi millionaire/billionaire execs.
See how much Mario movie made? Just wait...bet you there'll be a live action version. ;)