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  • Does the RAM speed really make a difference to the performance?

  • basically: yes - of course it has been significantly noticable with the introduction of dual channel memory as such, but from 800 to 1333 is more than 50% ... so given you don't have another bottleneck in your system a certain arrangement would load in eg. 2 minutes instead of 3 ...
    christian

    and remember: only a CRAY can run an endless loop in just three seconds.
  • But isn't the bottleneck reading from the hard drive, not writing to RAM?

  • ok, very bad and in fact wrong example ... but you will notice faster loading from good disks because of lesser wait states.
    say 2 or 3 modern disks in a system would allow 150 MB/s, this means 2 GB RAM should be filled 14 seconds - obviously this does not remotely happen (not even for a continuous read).
    reducing the cycle-time on the RAM side speeds up the whole loading process.
    christian

    and remember: only a CRAY can run an endless loop in just three seconds.
  • My confusion is that RAM access is measured in nanoseconds, in other words it's faster than human beings can even imagine. So I would have thought that copying samples from the hard disks' buffers into RAM would be instantaneous for all intents and purposes.

    I have no doubt you're right, but I don't understand why. [:)]

  • last edited
    last edited

    @Another User said:

    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


    That's what I'm going to do.
    Sergino

  • finding RAM is sometimes not too easy ... possibly 2GB modules for 1333 are currently only available with ECC - i've been looking for months now for half-height 1GB modules (any speed) without ECC and can't get some ...
    christian

    and remember: only a CRAY can run an endless loop in just three seconds.
  • Forgive me. Is difference from ECC to EOS RAM important?
    Could anybody explain there meanings?

    thanks
    Sergino

  • sorry, i don't know what EOS would mean ... ECC means *with error correction code*, often this RAM type is also reffered as *buffered* whereas *normal* RAM is describes as *unbuffered*

    some chipsets need ECC (eg intel 5000 series), some don't allow (eg. intel 6xx) and a few accept both.
    christian

    and remember: only a CRAY can run an endless loop in just three seconds.
  • SO, Is there a difference using Sonar and gigastudio with VSL Performance Tool and Vienna Virtual Intruments with different kinds of RAM (ECC or not, for example)? Is the latency important (is it better a 1.333 6-6-6-18 RAM or a 800 4-4-4-12?) DDR2 or 3?
    Anyone can give us some explanation. I work in the IT world but know almost nothing about RAM
    Ciao
    Sergino