Googer
Lifer
- Nov 11, 2004
 
- 12,576
 
- 7
 
- 81
 
Originally posted by: Sunbird
Well South Africa is far away from digital AND HDTV, 2010 at earliest for anything except satelite...
You can still record older analogue TV on your PC in a TiVO like fashion.
Originally posted by: Sunbird
Well South Africa is far away from digital AND HDTV, 2010 at earliest for anything except satelite...
Yes, you're right, but we're talking about the most logical upgrade path THIS summer, considering my current system. Even if I get Vista this fall/winter (I might not), I'm sure 2 GB would still be fine through all of 2007.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
I don't see what I misread. All you're talking about is going above 4 GB and I obviously would never be going beyond 2 with this board.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
Uhh, wtf? I currently have a gig and said I wanted to double it.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
That is also a consideration, but 1) Intel's prices would simply have to be more competitive, as AMD has always offered the better value since I've been building computers, and 2) since I already have a nice socket 939 board and a gig of really good DDR memory, I think if I just got an X2 processor and doubled my RAM I'd be good for another year to 18 months, wouldn't you think?Originally posted by: Looney
I'm personally going to skip AM2 and jump on Conroe.
Good luck installing more than 4GB on a socket 939 system.
- Soon DDR1 prices will be much higher than DDR2
 - The majority of socket 939 boards do not support more than 4GB
 - Memory Denisties will increase drasticly for DD2
 - DDR1 DIMM's most likely won't get much larger than 2GB on average, I know some rare 4GB dimms exist, but they are rare and setting them up in dual channel on 939 boards is pointless.
 - If you eventualy want more then 4GB+ get socket M2 and your memory budget will thank you later.
 
ABIT is the only manufacturer of Socket 939 to Support 8GB of RAM on most of their motheboards. Thank you ABIT.![]()
Apparantly reading is not one of your best attributes.![]()
If you upgrade to Vista, it will not be long before you may desire to have more than 4GB to take advantage of 64-bit capabilities. DDR1 RAM densities will not grow that much more in compairison to DDR2. DDR2 will only get cheaper while like PC133, DDR1 will skyrocket in price.
512MB of PC133 costs more than 1GB of DDR1 in todays market. Just 3.5 years ago, I purcheased 512MB of CAS2 PC133 for about $68 @crucial.com and today it sells for $95-126.
Originally posted by: archcommus
Yes, you're right, but we're talking about the most logical upgrade path THIS summer, considering my current system. Even if I get Vista this fall/winter (I might not), I'm sure 2 GB would still be fine through all of 2007.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
I don't see what I misread. All you're talking about is going above 4 GB and I obviously would never be going beyond 2 with this board.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
Uhh, wtf? I currently have a gig and said I wanted to double it.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
That is also a consideration, but 1) Intel's prices would simply have to be more competitive, as AMD has always offered the better value since I've been building computers, and 2) since I already have a nice socket 939 board and a gig of really good DDR memory, I think if I just got an X2 processor and doubled my RAM I'd be good for another year to 18 months, wouldn't you think?Originally posted by: Looney
I'm personally going to skip AM2 and jump on Conroe.
Good luck installing more than 4GB on a socket 939 system.
- Soon DDR1 prices will be much higher than DDR2
 - The majority of socket 939 boards do not support more than 4GB
 - Memory Denisties will increase drasticly for DD2
 - DDR1 DIMM's most likely won't get much larger than 2GB on average, I know some rare 4GB dimms exist, but they are rare and setting them up in dual channel on 939 boards is pointless.
 - If you eventualy want more then 4GB+ get socket M2 and your memory budget will thank you later.
 
ABIT is the only manufacturer of Socket 939 to Support 8GB of RAM on most of their motheboards. Thank you ABIT.![]()
Apparantly reading is not one of your best attributes.![]()
If you upgrade to Vista, it will not be long before you may desire to have more than 4GB to take advantage of 64-bit capabilities. DDR1 RAM densities will not grow that much more in compairison to DDR2. DDR2 will only get cheaper while like PC133, DDR1 will skyrocket in price.
512MB of PC133 costs more than 1GB of DDR1 in todays market. Just 3.5 years ago, I purcheased 512MB of CAS2 PC133 for about $68 @crucial.com and today it sells for $95-126.
Well I did say all of 2007. If I do an upgrade this summer that is 18 months, like I said in a previous post, and many people even said they would expect it to last longer than that. So it seems like a logical move to me.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
Yes, you're right, but we're talking about the most logical upgrade path THIS summer, considering my current system. Even if I get Vista this fall/winter (I might not), I'm sure 2 GB would still be fine through all of 2007.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
I don't see what I misread. All you're talking about is going above 4 GB and I obviously would never be going beyond 2 with this board.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
Uhh, wtf? I currently have a gig and said I wanted to double it.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
That is also a consideration, but 1) Intel's prices would simply have to be more competitive, as AMD has always offered the better value since I've been building computers, and 2) since I already have a nice socket 939 board and a gig of really good DDR memory, I think if I just got an X2 processor and doubled my RAM I'd be good for another year to 18 months, wouldn't you think?Originally posted by: Looney
I'm personally going to skip AM2 and jump on Conroe.
Good luck installing more than 4GB on a socket 939 system.
- Soon DDR1 prices will be much higher than DDR2
 - The majority of socket 939 boards do not support more than 4GB
 - Memory Denisties will increase drasticly for DD2
 - DDR1 DIMM's most likely won't get much larger than 2GB on average, I know some rare 4GB dimms exist, but they are rare and setting them up in dual channel on 939 boards is pointless.
 - If you eventualy want more then 4GB+ get socket M2 and your memory budget will thank you later.
 
ABIT is the only manufacturer of Socket 939 to Support 8GB of RAM on most of their motheboards. Thank you ABIT.![]()
Apparantly reading is not one of your best attributes.![]()
If you upgrade to Vista, it will not be long before you may desire to have more than 4GB to take advantage of 64-bit capabilities. DDR1 RAM densities will not grow that much more in compairison to DDR2. DDR2 will only get cheaper while like PC133, DDR1 will skyrocket in price.
512MB of PC133 costs more than 1GB of DDR1 in todays market. Just 3.5 years ago, I purcheased 512MB of CAS2 PC133 for about $68 @crucial.com and today it sells for $95-126.
I tend to look a little more than six months in the long term of owning a PC. When Planning to buy, I look for the parts that will give the longest possible life for a given dollar amount. If you buy a new computer every summer, then I suppose that the motherboards ram limit is not much an issue.
Originally posted by: archcommus
Well I did say all of 2007. If I do an upgrade this summer that is 18 months, like I said in a previous post, and many people even said they would expect it to last longer than that. So it seems like a logical move to me.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
Yes, you're right, but we're talking about the most logical upgrade path THIS summer, considering my current system. Even if I get Vista this fall/winter (I might not), I'm sure 2 GB would still be fine through all of 2007.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
I don't see what I misread. All you're talking about is going above 4 GB and I obviously would never be going beyond 2 with this board.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
Uhh, wtf? I currently have a gig and said I wanted to double it.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
That is also a consideration, but 1) Intel's prices would simply have to be more competitive, as AMD has always offered the better value since I've been building computers, and 2) since I already have a nice socket 939 board and a gig of really good DDR memory, I think if I just got an X2 processor and doubled my RAM I'd be good for another year to 18 months, wouldn't you think?Originally posted by: Looney
I'm personally going to skip AM2 and jump on Conroe.
Good luck installing more than 4GB on a socket 939 system.
- Soon DDR1 prices will be much higher than DDR2
 - The majority of socket 939 boards do not support more than 4GB
 - Memory Denisties will increase drasticly for DD2
 - DDR1 DIMM's most likely won't get much larger than 2GB on average, I know some rare 4GB dimms exist, but they are rare and setting them up in dual channel on 939 boards is pointless.
 - If you eventualy want more then 4GB+ get socket M2 and your memory budget will thank you later.
 
ABIT is the only manufacturer of Socket 939 to Support 8GB of RAM on most of their motheboards. Thank you ABIT.![]()
Apparantly reading is not one of your best attributes.![]()
If you upgrade to Vista, it will not be long before you may desire to have more than 4GB to take advantage of 64-bit capabilities. DDR1 RAM densities will not grow that much more in compairison to DDR2. DDR2 will only get cheaper while like PC133, DDR1 will skyrocket in price.
512MB of PC133 costs more than 1GB of DDR1 in todays market. Just 3.5 years ago, I purcheased 512MB of CAS2 PC133 for about $68 @crucial.com and today it sells for $95-126.
I tend to look a little more than six months in the long term of owning a PC. When Planning to buy, I look for the parts that will give the longest possible life for a given dollar amount. If you buy a new computer every summer, then I suppose that the motherboards ram limit is not much an issue.![]()
Originally posted by: SonicIce
Originally posted by: morkus64
i just ordered the AsRock mobo with the future slot... I'm not sure if i'll make the jump to AM2. Maybe, after i see some benchmarks on that particular board using the futureslot.
what exactly is that slot for anyway?
Originally posted by: morkus64
Originally posted by: SonicIce
Originally posted by: morkus64
i just ordered the AsRock mobo with the future slot... I'm not sure if i'll make the jump to AM2. Maybe, after i see some benchmarks on that particular board using the futureslot.
what exactly is that slot for anyway?
Exactly what Googer said... It'll hold a daughtercard with an am2 socket and ddr2 ram slots i believe
i'm wondering if someone will hack it to allow two cpus along with the 2 video cards.
Originally posted by: mechBgon
I got to throw in my 2¢ on this, here's a screenshot of my dual-core rig hard at work:Originally posted by: RichUK
Originally posted by: JackBurton
Whenever quad core CPUs come out, I'll get whichever board supports them. I'm REALLY stretching my Athlon XP 2600+ out.![]()
Quad cores are useless since we as consumer end users are not yet fully reaping the benefits from dual cores. I think quad cores will kick off in 2008+ at the earliest for consumers, and will be fully utilised by software in 2010. Most non enthusiast end users haven?t even heard of dual cores yet.
Its useless .. well .. unless you are a Server power user, that likes to play database![]()
http://pics.bbzzdd.com/users/mechBgon/I_WANT_QUAD-CORE.gif
The Adobe Premiere Elements 2.0 software is multiprocessor-aware and doubled its performance when I went from single-core to dual-core. As you can see, I'm also capturing from a camera using my Hauppage PVR-150 at the same time, as well as burning a CD in my second DVD burner, shopping two online storesD), running VirusScan Enterprise 8.0i... yeah, I think I'm gonna want that quad-core goodness, a 64-bit OS and 4GB+ of RAM sometime when I can afford it. Just having the Premiere Elements encoding go another 70%-90% faster would be sweet.
Again you confuse me. Who said I would buy three 2 GB sticks and then be like "Oh, sh!t, my motherboard can't support this!" All I said was I'd upgrade to 2 GB this summer and that would last me until 2008. I don't get your tangent, man.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
Well I did say all of 2007. If I do an upgrade this summer that is 18 months, like I said in a previous post, and many people even said they would expect it to last longer than that. So it seems like a logical move to me.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
Yes, you're right, but we're talking about the most logical upgrade path THIS summer, considering my current system. Even if I get Vista this fall/winter (I might not), I'm sure 2 GB would still be fine through all of 2007.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
I don't see what I misread. All you're talking about is going above 4 GB and I obviously would never be going beyond 2 with this board.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
Uhh, wtf? I currently have a gig and said I wanted to double it.Originally posted by: Googer
Originally posted by: archcommus
That is also a consideration, but 1) Intel's prices would simply have to be more competitive, as AMD has always offered the better value since I've been building computers, and 2) since I already have a nice socket 939 board and a gig of really good DDR memory, I think if I just got an X2 processor and doubled my RAM I'd be good for another year to 18 months, wouldn't you think?Originally posted by: Looney
I'm personally going to skip AM2 and jump on Conroe.
Good luck installing more than 4GB on a socket 939 system.
- Soon DDR1 prices will be much higher than DDR2
 - The majority of socket 939 boards do not support more than 4GB
 - Memory Denisties will increase drasticly for DD2
 - DDR1 DIMM's most likely won't get much larger than 2GB on average, I know some rare 4GB dimms exist, but they are rare and setting them up in dual channel on 939 boards is pointless.
 - If you eventualy want more then 4GB+ get socket M2 and your memory budget will thank you later.
 
ABIT is the only manufacturer of Socket 939 to Support 8GB of RAM on most of their motheboards. Thank you ABIT.![]()
Apparantly reading is not one of your best attributes.![]()
If you upgrade to Vista, it will not be long before you may desire to have more than 4GB to take advantage of 64-bit capabilities. DDR1 RAM densities will not grow that much more in compairison to DDR2. DDR2 will only get cheaper while like PC133, DDR1 will skyrocket in price.
512MB of PC133 costs more than 1GB of DDR1 in todays market. Just 3.5 years ago, I purcheased 512MB of CAS2 PC133 for about $68 @crucial.com and today it sells for $95-126.
I tend to look a little more than six months in the long term of owning a PC. When Planning to buy, I look for the parts that will give the longest possible life for a given dollar amount. If you buy a new computer every summer, then I suppose that the motherboards ram limit is not much an issue.![]()
By then 2 GB dimms will be a dime a dozen and that means you will have 6GB of ram but your motherboard will not be able to access all of it.. Socket M2 is just a few months away, I suggest it will be worth the wait for it or conroe.
just walk away manOriginally posted by: archcommus
Again you confuse me. Who said I would buy three 2 GB sticks and then be like "Oh, sh!t, my motherboard can't support this!" All I said was I'd upgrade to 2 GB this summer and that would last me until 2008. I don't get your tangent, man.
Originally posted by: rise4310
just walk away manOriginally posted by: archcommus
Again you confuse me. Who said I would buy three 2 GB sticks and then be like "Oh, sh!t, my motherboard can't support this!" All I said was I'd upgrade to 2 GB this summer and that would last me until 2008. I don't get your tangent, man.![]()
LOLOriginally posted by: Sunbird
Originally posted by: rise4310
just walk away manOriginally posted by: archcommus
Again you confuse me. Who said I would buy three 2 GB sticks and then be like "Oh, sh!t, my motherboard can't support this!" All I said was I'd upgrade to 2 GB this summer and that would last me until 2008. I don't get your tangent, man.![]()
Yeah, walk away, I like Googer but he has completely lost the plot in his replies to your situation.
