Monday, January 18, 2010

Auzentech Sound Card BEST RAM FOR MY SYSTEM?

BEST RAM FOR MY SYSTEM? - auzentech sound card

OK, I'll upgrade my system and I have some silly questions, possibly in order to ask

First, what is the best RAM possible for me to give my new motherboard (EVGA nForce 680i SLI - NVIDIA, Socket 775, ATX, T1 Version, Audio, PCI Express SLI-Ready)
http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/ ...


My plan is to have 8 GB of RAM, and I noticed that your motherboard supports DDR2 1200MHz (SLI-Ready)
[RAM is that, also because for the life of me, I was not in a position to a RAM, which corresponds to 1200MHz find]
if so, where can I find

Here are some of my new PC equipment

Motherboard: EVGA nForce 680i SLI - NVIDIA, Socket 775, ATX, T1 Version, Audio, PCI Express, SLI Ready

Proccessor: Intel Core 2 Duo E6850 Processor 3.0GHz OEM

Video Card: XFX GeForce 8800 GTS, 640MB GDDR3, PCI Express, SLI Ready, (Dual Link) Dual

Sound Card: Auzentech X-Fi Prelude 7.1 Sound Card

10 comments:

xylem said...

It runs as very sweet.

When I think of high quality RAM, I think Corsair. You Expesive really high-end memory. Although you probably will not make a big difference between this and something good, old Crucial memory reference, it seems that you are top of the line equipment.

I have a word of warning, however. And from the discussion page, it seems that I did not introduce the first of these. There is a limit of operating systems 32-bit 4 GB of RAM. Windows XP (32 bit) usually detects only 3.5 GB. So, if you want to get to 8GB, you need to take a 64-bit operating system. I recommend Windows XP 64-bit (the 16 GB of physical RAM supported). The driver supports, in the alternative 64-bit Vista is mediocre. It is a fundamental driver for Windows XP 64-Bit. However, you still have trouble finding the best and most drivers are in 64-bit versions. I would say stick with 4GB for now is more than enough RAM and you do not have to deal with the hassle of running an operating system, 64-bit.

United Nationsresistance that someone pointed out that the processor does not support 8 GB of memory. That is not true, the series Intel Core 2 Duo supports 64-bit address and 64-bit instructions. A 64-bit processor can manipulate thousands of petabytes of RAM (in theory, although I do not think that there are systems of commercial operations in support of more than 1 TB). His only problem will be the operating system level.

Timbuk4 said...

Apparently the trick is its 1200MHz "SLI-Ready is" is easier to cook overclock.It as Corsair and NVIDIA up.Can t 'see what he has to do with SLI itself.
Since the motherboard and processor support 1333Mhz,
Why pay stupid loans to 1200MHz, which is expensive? Install 1333Mhz - in the worst case shows that the clock does not hurt.
1333Mhz Overclocking of 5 or 10%. What the hell.

Timbuk4 said...

Apparently the trick is its 1200MHz "SLI-Ready is" is easier to cook overclock.It as Corsair and NVIDIA up.Can t 'see what he has to do with SLI itself.
Since the motherboard and processor support 1333Mhz,
Why pay stupid loans to 1200MHz, which is expensive? Install 1333Mhz - in the worst case shows that the clock does not hurt.
1333Mhz Overclocking of 5 or 10%. What the hell.

chancell... said...

I think the best is PC6400 RAM, it is cheaper and offers good performance. Frankly, I do not think you need 8 GB of RAM for this system, I think 4GB is enough.

But if you stick to 8 GB, here is a good RAM
http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/ ...

Hope this helps:)

chancell... said...

I think the best is PC6400 RAM, it is cheaper and offers good performance. Frankly, I do not think you need 8 GB of RAM for this system, I think 4GB is enough.

But if you stick to 8 GB, here is a good RAM
http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/ ...

Hope this helps:)

assassin... said...

The best place to start specing memory or the motherboard manual or use the main driver, or sites of Kingston. Absolutely nothing has no effect on your use of faster RAM requirements as the processor, but you will realize that there is a high price for sweet spot;)

chiefdom said...

(1) Check the installation instructions and tell you what RAM to work with your board.

(2) can speak your CPU to less than 4 GB of RAM, so that extra 4 GB will be in vain.

Hope this helps

David

Or (o)
""

jaquez said...

www.Crucial.com GOTO - which is an analyzer system or with the knowledge that can probably be created for specifications.

I have 1 GB for 57 $.

RonaD said...

http://memory4less.com/m4l_itemdetail.as ...

Not exactly a friendly reminder pricetag Tho.

This place is great for memory research Tho.

twigsoff... said...

"533MHz DDR2
DDR2 667 MHz
DDR2 800 MHz
1200MHz DDR2 "





Tiger Direct selection of memory chips are always stolen, it could be the reason for your problem, the speed of the memory to be found even


Here is a list of RAM you need at Newegg

http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductLis ...

if it is outside your price range, then here is "somewhat slower" DDR2-800 also meets your specifications tables.

http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductLis ...

The difference between DDR-1200 and DDR2-800 might be more honest 2.3 fps for the extra $ 100-200 you can spend an Nvidia GTX260 twice the computational power of an 8800GTS

I have an eVGA 8800GTS SSC 640MB TKO (112spu) Considered to be the fastest product 8800GTS time back in the day.

and I can say that a EVGA GTX260 SSC Edition 896MB is hilarious and faster.

8800GTS SSC Crysis played "okay"

GTX260 but the CDC said its motherf @ # $ ing A & ^ tCorner him.

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