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Thread: Motherboards for Athlon. Which has most memory slots?

  1. #1

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    Fanatic Member Kzin's Avatar
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    Motherboards for Athlon. Which has most memory slots?

    Which motherboards for Athlon (2100) has most DDR memory slots? If I can find one with 4 or more DDR slots this seems a cheaper than buying 1GB DDRs

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    Fanatic Member VisionIT's Avatar
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    What a wacky way to expand your memory

    The only MB's you are going to find are dual XP/MP's, which are practically server mobo's.

    Try Gigabyte's 7DPXDW(-c or -p)

    They are dual processor and i'm pretty sure have 4 DDR slots.

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    Paul.

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    Good Ol' Platypus Sastraxi's Avatar
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    Many have 4... two are black and two are grey. I believe the ones closer to the CPU are the full-speed ones (depending on your chipset, 333mhz or 400 mhz or 466mhz... etc) and the two farthest are the lower-speed (say 266mhz).
    All contents of the above post that aren't somebody elses are mine, not the property of some media corporation.
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    Fanatic Member VisionIT's Avatar
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    There are actually very few domestic platform mobo's with 4 DDR's, as it's usually not required. Search google for an entry of a domestic mobo 4xDDR or "4 x DDR DIM slots", and you won't find any without Grand champion chipset... ie server boards.

    Mobo's with the "two black & two grey" feature, usually specify that you only use one or the other, not both.

    Everyone recommends you run the same speed memory throughout your system, so having one at PC2700 and the other's at PC2100.. is pointless and probably unstable.

    Their are some new P4 Mobo's which have 6 DDR PC3500 compatible slots, but again... pointless if you want to use two different speeds of memory.

    Regards,

    Paul.
    Last edited by VisionIT; Apr 29th, 2003 at 04:24 PM.

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    Fanatic Member siyan's Avatar
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    ,....who the hell would need 6 DIMM slots????

    3 is plenty (KT400), but for nForce2 I'd prefer a 2+2 arrangement instead of 2+1.
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    Fanatic Member siyan's Avatar
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    erm...well i see how servers would need 6 DIMM slots....presumed that it was desktop mobos you were takling about
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    Your Ad Here! Edneeis's Avatar
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    If the chipset can handle 4 then most Abit boards have 4 slots, most except the nForce2 boards. Although you can get ram pretty cheap at newegg.com and probably be better off instead of buying a new board.

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    Originally posted by Sastraxi
    Many have 4... two are black and two are grey. I believe the ones closer to the CPU are the full-speed ones (depending on your chipset, 333mhz or 400 mhz or 466mhz... etc) and the two farthest are the lower-speed (say 266mhz).
    Yes I have one of those right here! But of course you canm only use two slots at a time.

  9. #9

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    Originally posted by siyan
    ,....who the hell would need 6 DIMM slots????

    3 is plenty (KT400), but for nForce2 I'd prefer a 2+2 arrangement instead of 2+1.
    Beacuse with 6 DIMM slots I could have 3GB of memory for about 150GBP ($250) whereas with 3 DIMM slots it would cost more like 450GBP ($750) and with 2 DIMM slots I don't think it can be done at all.

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    Fanatic Member siyan's Avatar
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    Originally posted by Kzin
    Beacuse with 6 DIMM slots I could have 3GB of memory for about 150GBP ($250) whereas with 3 DIMM slots it would cost more like 450GBP ($750) and with 2 DIMM slots I don't think it can be done at all.
    but unless its a server or very high end workstation, you don't need any more than 512 really.
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    Originally posted by siyan
    but unless its a server or very high end workstation, you don't need any more than 512 really.
    "640 KB should be enough for anyone"













    I've got 1GB at present and its really restrictive. I really need about 8GB at present.

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    Fanatic Member VisionIT's Avatar
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    Originally posted by siyan
    but unless its a server or very high end workstation, you don't need any more than 512 really.
    I agree.

    Although I am running 1Gb at the mo... only PC2700 though! I've given up on PC3200's, they don't last me long enough!

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    Fanatic Member siyan's Avatar
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    Originally posted by Kzin
    "640 KB should be enough for anyone"













    I've got 1GB at present and its really restrictive. I really need about 8GB at present.
    Wisdom was in short supply then, but I think you'll find many who agree with me now. (Thanks VisionIT ) Right now its really only the gaming industry and several more obsure industries that are really driving PC hardware development. For the rest of us, what we have right now is overkill.

    (Just imagine the graph of f(x)=ln(x)

    I own a P4-m 1.6, 256MB, 30GB, and aside from only having about 11GB free ( ) I'm doing just fine.

    If you need more than 1GB then I assume you're running a large database server/large web server, or doing a lot of 3D rendering and such. That would qualify as a high-end workstation/server.

    Or you just have too much money.
    Last edited by siyan; May 4th, 2003 at 11:09 AM.
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  14. #14
    Fanatic Member VisionIT's Avatar
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    Or you just have too much money

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    Frenzied Member numtel's Avatar
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    My shuttle ak35gt2 has 4 dimms but why would you ever need more than a gig of ram? If you are actually using 1gb of ram you must be doing something wrong on your computer.

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    Thread Starter
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    Originally posted by siyan
    Wisdom was in short supply then, but I think you'll find many who agree with me now.
    Plus Ça Change, Plus C'est La Même Chose


    Case I (real). Consider carrying out Fourier & Laplace transforms on datasets which were in excess of 16GB. Even with careful data reduction and matrix manipulation these can be reduced to ~1GB but even the processing needed to do this manipulation is heavy. Consider how long it thakes to do a write 1GB to RAM vs how long it takes to write 1GB to a swap file. How about 1000 read/writes? How many for an FFT ?

    Case II (another real one for me). With VMWare I can run as many virtual machines as I want on my PC and get a fast and dynamically re-configurable network for testing and analysis of multi-client server systems. If you want to model and test a network with guest machines with 256 MB ram (so they can have a realistic App load) then you can only fit 3 in 1 GB or you have to reduce each Virtual machine to about 64MB but they you spend all your time watching them running out of memory. Paging for host or guest is a bad idea with VMs.

    I agree 1 GB if fine if you are just writing your CV in word or 'The Sims'. Not everyone runs the same tasks on their PC

  17. #17

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    Originally posted by Kzin



    Case I (real). Consider carrying out Fourier & Laplace transforms
    *In MATLAB 6.5 - data files can now be greater than 2 gigabytes
    Last edited by Kzin; May 5th, 2003 at 10:59 AM.

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    Monday Morning Lunatic parksie's Avatar
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    I used to make a 10GB Origin 2000 swap like a beast ^_^
    I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
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    Fanatic Member siyan's Avatar
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    in such a case you should have a server farm.

    besides which, i do believe i said something about the excluded case of servers and workstations in my original message....
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  20. #20
    Fanatic Member siyan's Avatar
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    by server farm i mean a bunch of computers sitting there running a MATLAB kernel and assisting over the network (I assume it can do this)
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  21. #21

    Thread Starter
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    Originally posted by parksie
    I used to make a 10GB Origin 2000 swap like a beast ^_^

  22. #22

    Thread Starter
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    Originally posted by siyan
    in such a case you should have a server farm.

    besides which, i do believe i said something about the excluded case of servers and workstations in my original message....
    If you remember the limiting factor was the amount of local memory not the processor speed - so one CPU accessing 2GB of local memory is going to be a lot faster than two processors communicating over ethernet accessing 1GB each.

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