Create Your Own Psuedo-RDRAM 115
ucsimon writes: "For those of you who like to overclock, this is truly some hardcore stuff that shows how to convert SDRAM to RDRam. I value my ram too much to try, but I wonder if anyone out there has tried this yet. " Having the same sentimental attachment to my RAM that most people do, I haven't even attempted this either - anyone know if this works, even in theory? Post below. [Updated 28th April by timothy:] Well, this won't actually convert your SDRAM to RDRAM of course, but it will add to your heat-slurping overclocking abilities.
Overclocking is for kids (Score:1)
The idea of overclocking is pretty stupid really. I mean how many other expensive pieces of electronic equipement do you buy and then pump more current through? None, that's how many. So why do people feel the need to push their CPUs beyond their design parameters, risking data loss and burn out for a few MHz they'll never notice anyway.
Personally I think it's all a bit juvenile, sort of like the "my car's better than your car" mentality prevalent amongst boy racers. It's all just basically a penis substitute, and I think that those that feel the need to brag about it need to grow up and realise it's not all about size (or speed in this case).
Re:Time == Money (Score:1)
This is NOT about SDRAM -> RDRAM conversion! (Score:1)
The only reference to RDRAM is in it because it's shielding not only acts as a cooling element, but also shields the signal lines from unwanted RF. The article then goes on to explain how to create an RF shield for your SDRAMs.
This might be crucial if you get into the 150MHz range, where there could be a lot of RF signals nearby. Example: Ham radio stations operate in the 144-148MHz range, and your next door neighbour could be one of them. How would you like your system to crash each time he hits the mike??
Speed Limits (Score:1)
The federal gov't wanted to institute a national speed limit in response to a percieved shortage of petroleum. Nowhere in the constitution are they given that power, but the supreme court allows them to blackmail the states into passing uniform codes (this should be of interest to all hackers, the shrink-wrap liscense laws are going to be implemented this way!). And so, conformance with the national speed limit was tied to block-grants of federal monies to state highway maintainance funds.
The speed limit was 55mph for as far back as I can remember (hence, Sammy Hagar's "I Can't Drive 55"). American nature being what it is, most people felt it safe to go a bit faster, but with increased speed comes increased fines if caught. In some cases, the fine could DOUBLE if the driver went 15mph over the limit.
Thus, a lot of people feel that 70 is the safest practical speed for an automobile on american highways.
The current situation has changed. The blackmail laws are gone and some of the western states have completely repealed their speed limits (for highways, at least). Montana, iirc, is one of these.
For myself, my top speed is 110, and I only do that on this one section of road that I know is safe and I never see any cops.
--Threed
The Slashdot Sig Virus was foiled before it could spread.
Reality check. (Score:1)
Re:Oops (Score:1)
Umm.. What? (Score:5)
Doesn't Slashdot occasionally GLANCE at the links that are submitted before posting them?
150 MHz as EMI zone? (Score:2)
Re:Bullshit! (Score:2)
--
I have some PC100 ECC SDRAM w/ Shielding (Score:1)
A while back I bought some PC100 ECC SDRAM from eBay and it showed up with a metal shield similar in appearance to the one this article suggests installing. Of course, it was aluminum instead of copper and appeared to have been soldered onto the dimm at the factory. I think the dimm was OEM'd for Compaq or Dell.
Re:Hot Grits and Jews (Score:1)
Re:Crappy Moderators (Score:1)
Re:Not really... (Score:1)
Two things limit the maximum clock speed of a digital device: power dissipation and timing constraints.
Typically, one limit will mask another. In the case of PC-class CPUs, it is generally power dissipation that limits the top speed (as most people realise, power dissipation is directly proportional to clock speed) which is why all these weird and wonderful cooling devices make overclocking possible.
Eventually, you'll reach the second limit -- timing constraints. Timing constraints reflect the time taken for electrons to flow along a conductor and charge the capacitive loads they are connected to. They vary only a few percent with temperature, so no practical amount of cooling can overcome this limit.
I have no idea which of these RAMs are limited by. My gut feeling is that they are limited by timing constraints rather than power dissipation (for various reasons, the main one being that RAMs don't really get hot.) Anyone know for certain?
Re:Crappy Moderators (Score:1)
Re:what is happing to my comments? (Score:1)
<A HREF="
in front of the URL and
">
after it, but when you follow that with the text that you want to be the underlined clickable part, you aren't following *that* with
</A>
so that everything that follows is treated as part of what you wanted to be the underlined, clickable part.
Oh, one other thing. Apparently Slashdot doesn't like it if the A or the HREF or the other letters, like P, or I, or BR in between the less than and greater than signs are not uppercase.
Re:Thanks alot, i think it was the uppercase prob. (Score:1)
The reason I wrote out the above instead of ampersand el tee and such is that *sometimes* Slashdot will show everything looking right in preview, but change your actual text where you use the ampersand to give the appearance of HTML *into* HTML, so that when you actually submit it comes out looking like a real link.
The best time to avoid looking like an idiot in a post is when discussing imperfections in someone else's post.
Re:Same idea greatly simplified (Score:1)
Re:fix the url :) (Score:1)
fix the url :) (Score:2)
Re:Overclocking is for kids (Score:1)
Thus, a PIII 667EB is _exactly_ the same part as a PIII 500E, just running at a higher bust speed. In the case of the 500E, enough parts failed intel's performance tests to fail the entire batch. There are still parts in that batch that will run fine at 133Mhz fsb, though. Also, as the manufacturing process improves, more parts will pass the inspection tests, but lower speed parts will still be needed. Parts that passed the high-speed tests will be under marked simply to fill demand.
This means a few things... one, a certain percentage of 500E parts will run at 667 mhz. Later in the cycle, this number will increase to near 100%. This also means that intel's costs for the 500E and 667EB are EXACTLY the same. Faster CPUs are more lucrative, so intel is pushed to improve their fab processes to increase yields of the more expensive parts.
So the overclockers are really just taking advantage of Intel's product marking techniques. If they're kids, they're smart ones.
Incidentally, I usually choose not to overclock my systems. My upgrade cycle usually leaves me purchasing a top-of-the-line system every few years. Since I buy near the beginning of a product's life cycle, overclocking can reduce the life expectancy of my CPUs. I'll only ever overclock my home systems, and only as I approach upgrade time. This is done as a way of squeezing the last bit of life out of a system right before I get rid of it.
Re:Crappy Moderators (Score:1)
Re:How did THIS get posted??? (Score:2)
Spread Spectrum Clocking (Score:2)
As far as I know, what SSC does is jiggle the clock frequency a little, thus spreading EMI emissions out across a slightly wider range of frequencies. In other words, it gets around FCC EMI regulations without actually reducing the amount of energy radiated.
Not just an EMF Shield, also a heatsink. (Score:3)
"I'm not just an elder god, I'm cute too!"
Primary purpose of plate is as a "Heat Spreader" (Score:3)
Basically, RDRAM RIMMs give off a lot of heat, plus the heat is produced in a very small area. The aluminum covers are necessary to prevent hot spots. If you look at the figure 8-1 "Double-Sided RIMM Module Assembly-Exploded View", you'll see that the reference design calls for a thermal pad (Or thermal grease) between the heat spreader and the RDRAM chips.
About EMI (Score:2)
Anyway, I went to google for some links.
Here [ednmag.com] is a fairly general overview of EMI in computers. It talks about various strategies for dealing with it.
Here [isdmag.com] is an article mostly about SDRAM, but which says the following: "Spread Spectrum Clocking (SSC) is a frequency modulation technique for EMI reduction. In the latest motherboards, the master clock generator chip does not maintain a constant frequency." Anyone know if that is true? I didn't know that...
Finally, an article [intel.com] showing Intel is concerned about the problems of EMI in modern computers.
All in all, interesting stuff (I love absurb overclocking articles!) but I would like to have found some evidence that shielding memory like they did has any real benefit.
Sigh (Score:1)
Stability (Score:1)
Looks like it could work.
mvh
Thanks for the link Hemos! (Score:5)
How not to convert SDRAM into RDRAM (Score:3)
The article doesn't go into converting SDRAM into RDRAM at all. It's about making an EMI shielding for your SDRAM chips. This doesn't make the SDRAM into RDRAM although it make look like it. It's sort of like taking a saturn and putting a porsche body on top of it and expecting it to perform like a porsche.
RDRAM uses a 8 or 16 bit channel running at 300 to 400+ MHz with data being sent on the rising and falling edges of the clock. SDRAM runs at 100MHz on a 32bit bus that sends data on the rising edge only. Turning SDRAM into RDRAM would involve replacing the memory interface and control circuits on the SDRAM and changing the packing to fit in a RIMM. If you can do this, you'll probably do better to work as a chip designer for a semiconductor company and using the money you earn to buy some RDRAM.
Re:Overclocking is for kids (Score:1)
Not really... (Score:5)
1) The metal bracket on RIMMS isn't for EMI shielding, it's for heat. It's just like the heatsink on your CPU, which doesn't add to the EMI protection noticably.
2) A 150MHz SDRAM dimm isn't RDRAM. Rambus uses an entirely different protocol, and anyway... 150Mhz SDRAM is probably faster than rambus.
3) Your SDRAM won't work at 150MHz because it's simply too fast for the junctions to switch, not because of EMI. If you've got a serious EMI problem, you'll probably see it if you're overclocking or not.
4) That design shown probably wouldn't fix an EMI problem, either. It'll most likely act as an antenna, worsening the problem.
BUT... To whoever made that page.. Keep hacking. While this idea might not have worked, you may come up with a great supercooled DIMM refrigerator or something. Good luck.
strange reception (Score:1)
Muchas gracias.
Re:strange reception (Score:1)
Re:How did THIS get posted??? (Score:2)
Ideas (Score:1)
Re:strange reception (Score:1)
You live in GR? I grew up in Jenison but I've lived in Virginia since '89. What a small world. I used to really miss Studio28 but then AMC built a huge 24 screen theatre here with all stadium seating that really kicks but. Not a bad screen in the place. The area is pretty high-tech but Linux hasn't really been adopted yet. We havea small user group down in Virginia Beach and hopefully I'll start one up where I am within the next few months.
On the EM thing I also have trouble sometimes when I cross a local bridge down here. Whatever AM or FM station I'm on I pick up some kind of voice for about 5 seconds. Wierd. Voices in my head maybe? The Naval Air Station is nearby and they could be the culprits.
How do you do it?!?!? (Score:1)
Er... it appears that this page is about sheilding your SDRam. Is that all there to it?
Re:Sounds like voodoo to me (Score:1)
I thought it was "colour the outside edge with a green marker" or "cool cd in freezer"?
:)
Crappy Moderators (Score:1)
This is moderated as Redundent and reduced down 1. Another post with the same information, now up to 3, was posted just 1 minute before.
Don't moderators have anything better to do with their points rather than moderate down people who are trying to help?
Re:Crappy Moderators (Score:1)
If they surf at +1 they are getting alot worst stuff than redundant/informative posts. That should be the least of their conserns.
>how many of the rest of us need multiple links to the same page? I didn't think so.
Oh please, and no slashdot before ever had two people posting the exact same information/opinion ever before?
My point is that this is BARELY redundant, the difference between a +5 and a -1 is one minute. Tell me its not a crappy moderation system.
Re:How did THIS get posted??? (Score:1)
I'm not an overclocker, but... (Score:1)
What design parameters are you talking about? You're under the wrong impression if you believe a PIII 600 is a different chip than a PIII 850. They are, in fact the same chip, it's just that the 850 has probably passed more of Intel's QA. The argument for overclocking is that they're willing to bet Intel's standards are too strict (Intel does have to guarantee they chip will run at least at the advertised speed), and with proper cooling or whatever voodoo waving they do they can get their chip to run faster. And it is, in fact, a bet; overclockers void their warranty doing so.
While you may think this sort of thing is for kids, another argument has more merit - they money they save from buying a higher-rated chip can be used to buy a newer chip a year two down the line when it's time to upgrade (supposing their overclocked chip life's shorter). Naturally, I suppose they'll overclock those chips as well.
Slashdot just lost a lot of credibility for me. (Score:1)
'Turn your SD-RAM into RD-RAM??'
I used to respect slashdot, most everything on it was both interesting and factual.
Lately, its just infantile ranting and, in this case, lies.
Screw you, Hemos
-ikekrull.
Re:Overclocking is for kids (Score:1)
Re:Overclocking is for kids (Score:1)
Bought one last week for $100. Athlon 500MHz is the bargain of the year!
The best material to shielding EMI? (Score:1)
What is the guy on?
If he is trying to create a kind of Faraday cage then choose good conductors like Oxygen Free High Conductivity (OFHC) Copper. Even better use some superconducting material if you really feel like pushing the boat out.
Re:UHHH, NO (Score:1)
Re:Overclocking is for kids (Score:1)
Re:Overclocking is for kids (Score:1)
As for making SDRAM into RDRAM, would this mean that I could run SDRAM on a mobo that expected RDRAM? If so, then this is really a GREAT idea, since that RDRAM crap is just outrageously expensive for some reason.
geography for trolls, a reference for the rest of (Score:1)
First, the putz you responded to is a loser who lacks the skill to initiate a proper troll, and thus resorted to writing an off-color testament to his own lack of creativity. You fed him anyway. Bad smkndrkn!
Anyway most of the serious racists in this country are in the Pacific Northwest and the northern Midwest, where minorities *really are* a minority. Seattle is the worst city for minorities in the country, according to the NAACP (you can find the study somewhere in their vast labyrinthine web page, if you really want to). After Seattle comes Portland, Or., and third is Indianapolis, IN. It also really sucks to be Asian in Detroit. You're right about the KKK though; they are a bunch of ac's who should be moderated down immediately. With shotguns.
The probable reason that you think that the South is so bad is because of incredibly dishonest journalism and a few random outbreaks of stupidity perpetrated by isolated individuals (think alabama churches, s. carolina confederate flag, etc.) I used to think the same thing, until I moved to Nashville and actually saw what people are like here; my minority friends all have a deep-seated hatred for the south, and I think it is mostly unwarranted. There are stupid people here, like anywhere else in this country, and a lot of them drive pickup trucks, but violent crime committed with racist intent is relatively low as far as I have seen or heard. IMHO hating southerners because they are from the south is just as bigoted as hating a minority because of his race or creed. Hate any individual racist bastard you want to- mock him for his bigotry and for his obvious lack of education and pity him for his low self esteem - but don't lump them into a group with all of their neighbors, because most people just want to live their lives in peace.
I basically lost my (thai) fiance due to a similar prejudice; she refused to move here from denver because she was afraid of rednecks. So I am quite bitter about this particular kind of misconception. If this is a response to a second order troll, keep that in mind as you gloat...
Rev Neh
'Make' your own rdram? (Score:1)
Re:Not just an EMF Shield, also a heatsink. (Score:1)
This is the worst case behaviour of course - normal behaviour of the two is roughly random accesses and is probably about the same.
So probably adding a heat sink is not all that usefull for your SDRAMs unless you know you have a problem - and then more airflow in the case is probably a better bet.
As for an EMI shield? unless your neighbors (or spouse) are complaining about their TV reception what's the point
Re:Not really... (Score:1)
That is one hell of a sentence.
Slashdot cries out for open standards, then breaks them [w3.org].
Oh man (Score:1)
No thanks... (Score:2)
--
Re:Overclocking is for kids (Score:2)
70 is fast for you? 70 x 1.6 = 112 km/h. That is 2 km/h more than the legal speed limit on freeways here in Denmark. This is considered slow. Most people driving on the freeway is doing 130-140 km/h (~85-90 mph).
Just wondering..
I nominate this story for the worst of Slashdot (Score:1)
The web page in question tells you how to bend some copper and attach it to your SDRAM so that yes, it looks a little bit like an RDRAM if you squint a bit and the light is not so good.
Forget the RDRAM .vs. SDRAM debates. This is a non-story. It just doesn't deliver, even if you did want to do the conversion.
Is there anyway to down-moderate the base article off the front page?
Re:Overclocking is for kids (Score:1)
This isn't true with computers. Every 6 months news and faster computers hit the market. When was the last time a better toaster hit the market?
Let us not forget also (Score:1)
Besides, I think if butting copper around a PC133 DIMM was all it'd took, Intel would have come up with something easier that the bus translation adaptor thing for DRAM in their chipsets.
--It's amazing what they can do with copper these days
Re:Thanks alot, i think it was the uppercase prob. (Score:1)
-rt-
An excess of time (Score:1)
A friend of mine replaced his bios battery with a commerical one from a store.. personally, i was a tad afriad. It worked.. kinda
Whats the moral of the story? Im glad that someone has figured out how to do all of these neat things.. however, im also glad its not me.
--jay
Re:Bullshit! (Score:1)
Whilst you are right when you say
that more than tin-foil is required
to block radiation (working on the
design Radiation Tolerant chip right
now so I know what I'm talking about),
it WILL stop or at least dramatically
reduce magnetic interference.
You know, Faraday's cage...
J.
HEY moderators! (Score:1)
Redundancy is for posts like "Me too!" Have you actually READ the moderator guidelines?
Finish Your HTML Tags Hemos! (Score:1)
Can someone post the link so that I can know what I am supposed to posting about?
BTW, for my QA services, that will be $500. PayPal me at mindstorm@nospam.mediaone.net.
If design is not Bauhaus, it is Baroque.
Re:Finish Your HTML Tags Hemos! (Score:1)
If design is not Bauhaus, it is Baroque.
Re:Finish Your HTML Tags Hemos! (Score:1)
If design is not Bauhaus, it is Baroque.
Law of Diminishing Returns (Score:2)
Also there is one quesiton: stability? What happens when the homebrewed shield falls off?
RAMBUS prices will go down. For the rest of us, we will wait for that event.
If design is not Bauhaus, it is Baroque.
Nintendo rdram... (Score:1)
And what's this i hear about the Athlons not having RDRAM? The preview on cpu-central said it would like 6 months ago...
Re:How did THIS get posted??? (Score:1)
Well, more speed is always good with RAM. RDRAM however, is a mixed blessing. The maximum transfer rates are great, but the latency is somtimes worse than with SDRAM, and it's not constant.
How could it benefit? Space exploration in the presence of stray electromagnetic fields? Nope, non-crashing computer in the presence of a cel phone. Of course, the case of the computer should already take care of that.
Re:Overclocking is for kids (Score:1)
It's not the number of MHz that counts, it's what you do with them...
Re:moderate this TROLL down! (Score:1)
I don't think I mind pissing "you" off...
Re:How did THIS get posted??? (Score:2)
Working Link (Score:5)
How did THIS get posted??? (Score:5)
This article merely tells you to make an SDRAM module look like and RDRAM by giving it a shield agains electromagnetic emissions. This might have some benefit in very rare cases, but realistically, it's totally pointless.
facts, reality and such (Score:1)
I don't know why all you have such a liking for facts, and reality and such. I just wanted to get a posting on the main page, and I found the page amusing because it did indeed have potential to be misleading. I was hoping that a news outlet would pick it up, and talk about overclocking alchemy and so on. and then Intel would freak out and start suing people, and then Dr. Dre and Snoop Doggy Dogg would get involved...and somewhere along the line I would become a nerd martyr....ummm. yeah. so there.
-dennis the kid
Re:Speed Limits (Score:1)
#1 people don't know how to drive anymore,
#2 cars aren't built as well anymore,
#3 people complained that having people going fast was scarey.
People these days yeesh! Wait wasn't this thread supposed to be about this cute copper foil you can glue to your ram so you can be l33t? I think there might be some benifit from dissipating heat if there is a heat problem and if there is and EMI problem it might be possible that it shields that but in the end it seems this dude just had some killer ram chips that he was able to overclock really well.
Re:You people are all NUTS (Score:1)
-Ma Tin Yuan
Who is glad that, three weeks later, he spent that hundred bucks he saved on buying CAS-2 PC-133 RAM instead of CAS-3 PC-100. He also OC's his TNT2-Ultra, and is considering OC'ing his modem to see if he can get below 300 ping with it...
adennum (Score:1)
-Ma Tin Yuan
"If I overclock my SoundCard, will MP3's play back too fast?"
Re:Overclocking is for kids (Score:1)
* Yes, in Michigan this is legal.
Bullshit! (Score:3)
A little knowledge is a dangerous thing... (Score:2)
actually (Score:1)
Time == Money (Score:1)
kwsNI
Re:fix the url :) (Score:2)
kwsNI
Re:Sounds like voodoo to me (Score:1)
I agree about the voodoo. This is offtopic I know, but what I don't understand is why audiophiles go to such extremes as they do without worrying about the effects of static discharge on their expensive electronics. I don't have a business selling gold plated wriststraps and living room sized oxygen free rubber anti-static mats, but I'd get a real sense of satisfaction if I could persuade even one audiophile to take me seriously.
Re:Bullshit! (Score:1)
I just took another look at the article. The copper sheet is earthed via a wire and a crocodile clip. If anyone here did an electronics course, remember how you never got a square picture of a square wave on the oscilloscope screen until you used the right earthing attachment and calibrated the probe tip? Anything that the copper shield picks up flows back to the case via the inductance of the cable and the mechanical (not soldered) crocodile clip connection, which will ring like crazy at high frequencies.
At least try soldering the copper to all of the SIMM ground pins to get a good earth. Then I would ask if all that extra capacitance isn't loading down the signal traces and slowing down your system.
The more I think about this, it is bull. I do know for sure that getting earthing and shielding to work is as much an art as a science, but the test of science is whether or not this makes a measurable improvement.
This could be easier (Score:2)
Why RDRAM is good for consoles but bad for PCs (Score:3)
See, RDRAM has large latency (approx. 28 cycles @ 400MHz for a random access = 70ns) but for sequential accesses it spews the data out very very fast indeed (a 16-bit-channel RDRAM setup at 400MHz can spew out 16 bytes in 4 cycles = 10ns; a 32-bit-channel dual-chip setup - only found in consoles - can double this to 32 bytes in 10ns).
This is great for consoles, where you have lots of DMA going concurrently with semi-random CPU cacheline refills. For this application, RDRAM is much, much cheaper than the alternative (which would be 128-bit-wide, 100MHz synchronous RAM of some flavor). RDRAM also wins hands down on simplicity of system design since its data bus is only 16 bits, or 32 bits in dual-chip setups, plus only 8 more bits for addressing. It provides superb theoretical bandwidth, which can be approached quite closely in a well-designed console (er ... can someone build a well-designed console for me? ;)
However, for PCs, the case is much less clear cut. DMA seems to be far less important these days, and you certainly won't see half a dozen concurrent DMA channels going over a 200MHz FSB anytime soon. Even building a 200MHz FSB would be practically impossible in a modular system such as the desktop PC. Consoles are so non-modular, the current crop are internally dense as hell with heatsinks and EMI shielding, and the primary internal busses are no more than half an inch long.
To make RDRAM work great with a desktop PC would take, in my estimation, far, far better RDRAM controllers than are currently available, and integrated much more tightly with the CPU, and communicating over a synchronous bus of at least 128 bits.
RDRAM definitely wins on bandwidth, but its latency is so atrocious that you need a good prediction of what data is needed next ... easy to do on a dozen DMA channels but when the primary channel is the CPU it's near-impossible.
In summary, RDRAM is too application-specific to be suitable for desktop PCs, and the controllers are not yet mature enough to get anything like full speed from it in Real World PC applications.
Not to mention the fact that it's proprietary, so it intrinsically costs more to manufacture than other RAM designs.
Slashdot - Not News! (Score:1)
Re:UHHH, NO (Score:1)
Agreed...read the TITLE tag...
Correct, it does say "Make your own RDRAM". This is very misleading, however, I think everyone has to look a bit below that, where it states that the article is a translation. I think everyone here who has ever used Babblefish knows what effects translations can do, even if the translator is human.
What EMI? (Score:1)
An week in the laboratory will save an hour in the library!
Sounds like voodoo to me (Score:3)
Re:Overclocking is for kids (Score:1)
That is stupid. I will overclock it to 750. Chips are coming off of the lines running at much greater speeds than the manufacturers want us to realize. The yields are just too damned good to ignore.
btw, this is from Sharky Extreme's CPU price guide:
Athlon 750: $311
Athlon 500: $146
If you cannot see wthat overclocking is a viable alternative to spending too much money, by all means don't do it. For the rest of us who can barely afford the 500, it is worth a shot to at least try 750.
Re:Finish Your HTML Tags Hemos! (Score:1)
(I want to see at least ONE +1 Funny out of this if I get mod'd down... Come on, have a heart.)
Re:Here's the real link: (Score:2)
Let's hear it for moderation folks! (And for those of you who have itching fingers to mark this down as a troll or something, give it up. It's a serious post. Don't waste your points, find something actually worth reading somewhere and bring it to the top. If I was trolling I would not be using my name, as thats just stupid.)
Re:Finish Your HTML Tags Hemos! (Score:1)
Can someone post the link so that I can know what I am supposed to posting about?
View page source. You are a geek, aren't you?
Actually... (Score:2)
--
An armed society is a polite society
why RDRAM? ACTUAL performace increase is minimal (Score:2)
Check out the mem. specific stuff here, not to worry. This link works
Why does my links act(i would have said something else, but i hurts my karma!!) up? the html is correct, THANK YOU.. and the complete mb review, here [sharkyextreme.com]
Its interesting stuff, i know it saved me from running out getting a i820 based motherboard.
UHHH, NO (Score:4)
EK-Hack