sergino, not all chipsets support ddr3 and only a few (like the G35) are supporting the theoretical higher throughput compared to ddr2.
speed would be either 677 or 400 MHz, the dual channel technology gives a *virtual speed* of 1333 or 800 then - but 400 MHz sticks (PC3200) are a little bit outdated, so if your motherboard supports 533 or 677 (PC5300) MHz you should get such modules with 2 GB each.
in case you buy branded sticks (samsung, kingston, corsair, ect) timing shouldn't be an issue ourdays (CL5 is a common kriteria) but try to get matched pairs because of the dual channel technology ...
christian
speed would be either 677 or 400 MHz, the dual channel technology gives a *virtual speed* of 1333 or 800 then - but 400 MHz sticks (PC3200) are a little bit outdated, so if your motherboard supports 533 or 677 (PC5300) MHz you should get such modules with 2 GB each.
in case you buy branded sticks (samsung, kingston, corsair, ect) timing shouldn't be an issue ourdays (CL5 is a common kriteria) but try to get matched pairs because of the dual channel technology ...
christian
and remember: only a CRAY can run an endless loop in just three seconds.