Yes, as long as all the modules in a memory bank have the same latency, different memory banks can have different latencies.
When you upgrade the modules in your computer, you need to match the latencies of new ones to the old ones in the computer. When they are not the same it can cause the computer to run slow and not run properly.
When you upgrade the modules in your computer, you need to match the latencies of new ones to the old ones in the computer. When they are not the same it can cause the computer to run slow and not run properly.
When you upgrade the modules in your computer, you need to match the latencies of new ones to the old ones in the computer. When they are not the same it can cause the computer to run slow and not run properly.
yes with 2gb ram is more faster
System RAM and Video RAM are two separate technologies, and do not directly depend on each other. It is possible to run a video card with GDDR6 on a system with only DDR1 RAM installed, and just as possible to run a video card with GDDR1 on a system with DDR3 RAM installed. Having a high speed GDDR video card will improve rendering performance, while having high speed RAM will improve loading times.
There are many different kinds of RAM. Ram is not related to the operating system. It is related to the motherboard. You need RAM that is compatible with your motherboard. When you do that XP or any other operating system will run.
Yes you can run Mac OS X on a iBook G3. You would not be able to run Leopard but you can run previous versions of OSX. 10.4 requires 256megs of RAM and 10.3 and earlier require 128megs of RAM or more. Though it will run with this amount of RAM, I would recomend getting as much ram as possible in your iBook because it will help alot on basic OS X functions. I did the same thing with a lower ended iMac G3 and when I upgraded the ram to 512megs instead of 256megs it ran quite a bit faster.
Your motherboard will only run at the slowest speed of RAM you have installed, so installing faster RAM will have no effect speed-wise.
RAM memory is a very important factor for how well games run, and most gamers prefer having as much RAM as possible. A good amount of RAM would be anything around 4GB or more.
you won't have problem with your ram but you have problem with your graphics card
no it is not possible with that configuration ,...
There's a few different ways you could go about this. One way to go about this would be to run the command line utility dmidecode with root permissions. Near the bottom, it will list information about each RAM module, such as manufacturer information (in a hex code) as well as speed in megahertz. You may want to redirect its output to make it easier to read, such as by using dmidecode > dmidecode.txtAnother way would be to use Memtest86. This is not part of Linux itself, but is included with many Linux distributions such as Ubuntu. This will display RAM speed (in megahertz) as well as timings and latencies.