200 MHz
The RAM Speed is the frequency which the RAM Module operates at. The speeds are measured By DDR, DDR1, DDR2, DDR3, and DDR4. Frequencies range from the DDR 300 Mhz to the DDR4 2Ghz (2800 Mhz).
The system clock rate is the speed at which your computer can proccess data. These days it's measured in Ghz, or in terms of the FSB or RAM, Mhz The higher the number, the faster it is, and these days its generally 2-3 Ghz on average. There is however Dual and Quad Core CPU's, that deliver extremely higher preformance with a lower clock speed.
The RAM (Memory)
Computer speed depends on many factors, depending on what you need it to do. The required components must work in concert, with the lowest spec one usually limiting the others. In short, low RAM may limit a computer's performance, but it is more likely to be a combination of factors, usually software.
Yes, as long as the motherboard is not picky about the RAM, it should work fine, but the motherboard will throttle the RAM to PC2100 speed if that is the fastest it supports.
The processor RAM Cach clock speed ranges between 3.3 to 4.00 GHz.
clock speed
Isn't ProMos a RAM vendor? If this is the case, I believe ProMos shipped their 1GB part at PC-DDR2 5200, or 667MHz for the clock frequency of the RAM itself. The processing unit built into the ram probably doesn't have a discernible clock speed, or it is synced with the RAM's clock speed.
Depending on what your motherboard can handle, all the RAM (regardless of clockspeed) will clock to the same speed.
C. 266MHz
ACPU has multimedia instructions called
yes, you can. but both will run on the lowest component speed.. so your ddr3 1600 module will only run at 1333.
CPU front side bus RAM clock rate
DDR RAM doubles its speed by using both the rising and falling edge of the clock signal. The advantage of DDR and QDR signaling is that the clock rate does not have to be increased. So the integrity of the signal is not compromised since the throughput can be increased without increasing the clock rate.
It doesn't; the clock speed of your RAM is governed by your Front Side Bus clock frequency. With more RAM installed your PC will run faster, but the CPU clock speed is not responsible for this. Actually,installing RAM would never effect the processor speed .AS there is a clock generator(eg:8284-A which was being used in the 8086 processor long back) which determines the clock of of the processor which in term is responsible for the speed of the processor.for eg:Every read or write operation takes 4 clock cycle for instance & if ur processor's clock speed is 1 mega hZ frequency i.e a clock pulse is of 1 micro seconds i.e ur write operation will take 4 micro sec & suppose my processors's clock speed is 2 mega hZ frequency i.e a clock pulse is of 0.5 micro seconds i.e my write operation will take only 2 micro second. now what actually RAm is? it is just a temporary memmory provided to the prcessor for communication. processor hardly communicates with the hard disk. whatever data is required by processor it is first transfered to the RAm first and processor retrives it from there.so if u have larger RAm large data can be stored in it & would not want it regularly from the hard disk. there r a lot of other things involved like the type of architecture and cache memmory.however ,i hope i would have answered to this question. BY:- KALLAT VINAY(mumbai-vasai computer engineer).
The "S" stands for Synchronous RAM. By Synchronous that means it worked with the system clock and the speed of the RAM is the same as the speed of the system bus. So if the system bus is operating at 100MHz then Synchronous RAM also operated at 100MHz. It has since been replaced by Double Data Rate RAM (DDR). Double Data Rate goes twice as fast as the system clock, it sends data on the upswing of the clock and again on the downcycle of the system clock so it can send data twice as fast as the Synchronous RAM which sent data once per clock cycle. Hope this helps.
A rating of MHz, or GHz. Usually GHz when dealing with a processor. MHz when dealing with RAM.