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ForumsDiscussion Forum → Selling..
Selling..
2006-08-09, 3:58 PM #1
Hey guys I'm thinkin' about selling a 1GB stick of Corsair PC3200 DDR 400 RAM. Fits in nForce mobos. Anyone interested?
2006-08-09, 4:05 PM #2
Damn you i jsut bought 2 Gig Yesterday :(
2006-08-09, 4:15 PM #3
Originally posted by sum1givusaname:
Damn you i jsut bought 2 Gig Yesterday :(

They....Have...Those?

*Stares at his depressing 192 meg POS
2006-08-09, 4:20 PM #4
No.. he bought two 1 gig sticks.
2006-08-09, 4:25 PM #5
No, they have 2 Gb flash drives.
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2006-08-09, 4:28 PM #6
Originally posted by -Monoxide-:
No.. he bought two 1 gig sticks.


Newegg says you are wrong. http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?Item=N82E16820145597
2006-08-09, 4:45 PM #7
Would I be an uber-nerd if I asked for a second gig of RAM for my birthday?
I had a blog. It sucked.
2006-08-09, 5:43 PM #8
Originally posted by -Monoxide-:
Hey guys I'm thinkin' about selling a 1GB stick of Corsair PC3200 DDR 400 RAM. Fits in nForce mobos. Anyone interested?


If only it had been DDR2 533 then we would have been in business.
2006-08-09, 5:45 PM #9
Damn right I'm interested!! I just have 756 total MB of RAM, any upgrade is welcome. Also, uh, where do I find out what kind of motherboard I have? :o

What's the price? Chances are I won't be able to afford it, but I may as well try.
DO NOT WANT.
2006-08-09, 5:50 PM #10
Originally posted by Zloc_Vergo:
Would I be an uber-nerd if I asked for a second gig of RAM for my birthday?


not really, it just means you lack happiness and friends.
2006-08-09, 5:53 PM #11
I have no money :0
2006-08-09, 8:01 PM #12
Okay, since Monoxide is officially retarded, I'll clarify for everyone.

1) It's DDR. PC3200 means DDR400. It'll work with almost any motherboard, except the most current of generation AMD motherboards (AM2 socket), and some Intel boards. Old boards may as well not even go for it (older than 2000-2002, depending.).

2) It shouldn't go for more than 60 bucks used.
D E A T H
2006-08-09, 8:01 PM #13
[QUOTE=Dj Yoshi]Okay, since Monoxide is officially retarded, I'll clarify for everyone.

1) It's DDR. PC3200 means DDR400. It'll work with almost any motherboard, except the most current of generation AMD motherboards (AM2 socket), and some Intel boards. Old boards may as well not even go for it (older than 2000-2002, depending.).

2) It shouldn't go for more than 60 bucks used.[/QUOTE]
reatard kol
2006-08-09, 8:10 PM #14
I'm getting a terabyte of ram...
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2006-08-09, 8:12 PM #15
yeah well I've got 4 petabytes of ram
I had a blog. It sucked.
2006-08-09, 8:21 PM #16
Originally posted by JediKirby:
I'm getting a terabyte of ram...

Have fun with that, since most motherboards support 2gb only, with the rare few at 4gb.
D E A T H
2006-08-09, 8:27 PM #17
I thought there was one that supported 8gb.

And I also thought most supported 4gb, with 4 slots?
I had a blog. It sucked.
2006-08-09, 8:27 PM #18
[QUOTE=Dj Yoshi]Have fun with that, since most motherboards support 2gb only, with the rare few at 4gb.[/QUOTE]
Bleh, you're living in the past. A lot of newer motherboards support 8 or 16 gigs. And of course biggest I know of offhand is some socket 771 motherboards that support 64 (with 16 DIMM slots, so a server board of course)...

Shoot, my almost 3 year old Socket 478 motherboard supports 4.
2006-08-09, 8:39 PM #19
Originally posted by Zloc_Vergo:
I thought there was one that supported 8gb.

And I also thought most supported 4gb, with 4 slots?

No, 2gb with 2-4 slots. 4 slots just makes dual dual channeling (a rather pointless endeavor anymore) possible, and allows for more expansion easier.

Originally posted by Darth:
Bleh, you're living in the past. A lot of newer motherboards support 8 or 16 gigs. And of course biggest I know of offhand is some socket 771 motherboards that support 64 (with 16 DIMM slots, so a server board of course)...

Shoot, my almost 3 year old Socket 478 motherboard supports 4.

Oh I know the present has such boards. Like most enthusiasts, you've forgotten that the newest technology is always the least popular.
D E A T H
2006-08-09, 8:49 PM #20
Eh, not really that new. Lots of 939 boards support 8, as well as some of the nForce 4 LGA 775 boards released back when nVidia went to Intel. Hardly rare and brand new stuff. And like I said, a 3 year old Abit IS7 board that I have which was a really popular P4 board supports 4, so I'd hardly say 4 gig boards were a "rare few". Anyway, new or not, doesn't remove the fact that it exists and thus can be bought and used to achieve such a memory capacity.
2006-08-09, 8:52 PM #21
Originally posted by Darth:
Eh, not really that new. Lots of 939 boards support 8, as well as some of the nForce 4 LGA 775 boards released back when nVidia went to Intel. Hardly rare and brand new stuff. And like I said, a 3 year old Abit IS7 board that I have which was a really popular P4 board supports 4, so I'd hardly say 4 gig boards were a "rare few". Anyway, new or not, doesn't remove the fact that it exists and thus can be bought and used to achieve such a memory capacity.

But the thing is, all the boards you're talking about are enthusiast boards, or at least the vast majority of them. Very few actual vendors use 939 boards in their setups--they stuck with 754. 4 gig boards are far and away the rare exception in the overall picture.

I never argued they didn't exist, just that the majority of massassians with store-bought, older PCs probably wouldn't have support for 4 gigs of memory or more.
D E A T H
2006-08-09, 8:55 PM #22
I'd hardly call an IS7 an enthusiast board. It was a fairly cheap 865PE board, whereas the enthusiast boards of that era were 875 based and cost much more. You're thinking too much in the scope of just AMD, and forgetting that lots Intel boards had 4 DIMM slots and supported up to 4 gigs for quite a while.
2006-08-09, 9:22 PM #23
I'd be willing to let it go for $50 - 60 since I haven't even used it. ( My mobo can't handle it. All the games and programs I try to play/utilize with two gigs have unexpected errors when i try to launch them. Once I took the stick out, they all worked fine. So yeah, anyone (genuinely) interested?
2006-08-09, 9:25 PM #24
Uhh... unexpected errors? Did you try running ram test?
2006-08-09, 9:31 PM #25
It was just too much ram, haven't you ever heard of that? Like it would just crash on startup, and my computer would flash a blue screen and restart randomly sometimes.
2006-08-10, 6:20 AM #26
64 GB is the maximum you can have using a 32-bit processor with PAE (or 2^36 bytes). Using a 64-bit processor and OS, you are blessed with a maximum of 16777216 TB of RAM.
[This message has been edited. Deal with it.]
2006-08-10, 6:49 AM #27
Originally posted by Darth:
I'd hardly call an IS7 an enthusiast board. It was a fairly cheap 865PE board, whereas the enthusiast boards of that era were 875 based and cost much more. You're thinking too much in the scope of just AMD, and forgetting that lots Intel boards had 4 DIMM slots and supported up to 4 gigs for quite a while.

True, but that's because for a while anyone who was an enthusiast didn't get an Intel board ;)
D E A T H
2006-08-10, 9:40 AM #28
i have more ram than feilds of sheep.

[1 gig to be exact]
Laughing at my spelling herts my feelings. Well laughing is fine actully, but posting about it is not.
2006-08-10, 11:17 AM #29
Anyone? Zell?

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