Added: 3 years ago
From: windowshacker66
Views: 10,728
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  • got the 1600mhz T1 and its awesome ! am getting the heatsink soon :D

  • arrr video quality!!! improve it, please

  • The last Kingston RAM I used was RDRAM on my old P4.

  • I think its just lame to note "this stuff is amazing" because in 2-3 years this stuff is outdated bullshit

  • what a show off

  • heard this ram kit has some problems is that true?

  • I use Kingston RAM! =D

  • me too!!!

  • kingston ram is cheaply made

  • i have a question i just put 4gb on my Imac and i have windows XP installed in it well on my Imac it shows that i have DDR2 4gb ram well on my Windows CP it says i have 2.98gb of ram anyone know why plz

  • that's because you put 4 gbs in a 32bit operating system. you have to get Windows XP64 bit or windows server 2003 to get it to work with 4gb.

  • because it only supports 3gb, i used have vista home edition and it only used 3gb when i had 4.

    Now i have 16gb ddr3 1600mhz. and Windows 7

  • Hello.

    I guess it's because when XP was designed 2.98 GB was the biggest most possible RAM ammount that was on the market.

    Don't worry until you have more than 4GB or RAM taken by programs, until then you will be OK.

    Hope that this helps.

    :-)

  • yeah lol u must be using 32 bit, u have to use 64 bit

  • lol the 24 gb desktop should open anything that just comes in my mind beforce i take action lol

  • Woah! If you use that one computer with 24gb of ram as a server it'll last forever. lol

  • huh? as a server it would already be outdated. current high performance servers start with 32gb of ram and up. even the cheap do-it-yourself models support up to 48gb. models with 128gb of ram have been around for over 2 years now, so 24gb wouldn't get you far unless you only ran your own website from it...

    as a home user, i can already max out 16gb, so those 24gb give little head room for the future, but i guess that'll change soon

  • my own website. But honestly I can see that in the future, you'll be able to add SSD directly to the motherboards as ram. imagine a 1tb stick of ram about the size of a 500GB laptop SSD.

  • once that happens, you'll never need more than one slot.

  • apart from the fact that this is highly impractictal, because it would require lots of space on the mainboard (show me one, that has some to spare), this already exists. a manufacturer, whose name escapes me right now is selling SSD cards of up to 80gb that connect directly through PCIe to the board. this is meant for high-performance servers. for normal users a cable connected SSD will always do. btw, SSDs are not comparable to ram. they are significantly slower and will not replace ram

  • Well, it would be where the ram slots are. It could be placed sort of like the ram in laptops. Maybe the physical size of the 256GB one would be more practical.

    watch?v=a0IlSmmvHuQ

  • what I meant was as an inexpensive server. you can make that thing for like less than 3000$.

  • Thats Freakin Amazing

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