FishTankX has a good point.... or raises one that a LOT of computer users don't think about. You must make your computer for what you NEED--there are a lot of inherent tradeoffs. He's exactly right, if you NEED a lot of memory, DDR is absolutely the way to go--its cheaper, and its bandwidth is approaching that of RDRAM. So, for video editing, DDR is a wise choice. I've even seen P3s with 4GB of PC133 outperform P4s with 512MB of PC1066 in the right setting. However, if you do a LOT of serial-execution programming (as I do), the speed (and the prefetch in the P4) lets RDRAM outperform DDR by a significant margin (I've seen as much as 20% increase in computational time for my finite element models). But its pricey. So, consider what you're doing. If you're like most computer users--you browse the web, write a paper or two, do some photo-editing, and play a few games, I would recommend a good 845PE board and some PC2700.