A commercial chip that tests thousands of genes can cost more than $1,000.
The chips driving the revolution currently cost too much to use in general lighting.
In quantities of 1,000, the 68040 chips cost $595 each.
Instead, European buyers could pay some $23m more than the $200m their chips would probably have cost them if the market had been left to itself.
And the chips now cost money to dispose of, $35 a ton.
The chips cost $6.50 for eight ounces at their store.
The natural chips cost about 10 cents an ounce more than the classics.
Each chip costs the Hard Rock a little more than 50 cents.
The chip would cost about $100 today, but a fraction of that once it is mass produced.
Who knows, maybe the better chips only cost an extra 10 cents.