DDR2 RAM is slightly smaller and has square chips. DDR1 RAM has rectangular chips.
To enter codebreaker codes in DDR Supernova 2, first, start the game and navigate to the options menu. Select the "Edit Data" option, then choose "Codebreaker" and input the desired code using the controller. After entering the code, confirm your input, and the game will apply the cheats or modifications associated with the code. Be sure to save your changes before exiting the menu.
This laptop has a 1.83 GHz Core Duo processor, 1 GB of DDR RAM, an 80 GB hard drive, a 14 inch screen, and wireless a/g and Bluetooth built in. It comes with the Windows XP operating system.
To win songs you have to beat the various clubs that it gives you. Which means you have to do all these weird quests like change settings and then do songs in the clubs. Anyways, I haven't played for a while but you get songs every time you beat one of those levels and you also can get songs by getting A, AA, AAA on songs in normal play.
Yes, there is a stamp issued by Czechoslovakia in 1965 that features the chemical structure of benzene. It was part of a series of stamps commemorating the 100th anniversary of the birth of organic chemist J. Loschmidt.
Edited: 10/02/09 12:32 AM PDTThe previous answer here said simply:"8 bits"....which might be correct for the rate of data transfer (per cell), but that doesn't answer the question!The way I finally figured it:A 256MB (mega BYTE) module has 8 cells, (or chips).256/8 = 32MB per cellTo convert BYTES to BITS, multiply by 8; (8 BITS to a BYTE).32MB (x8) = 256Mb (mega BITS) per cell.To convert MEGA bits to BITS*:*(when referring to data storage, as in this case...)1Mb = 1048576 bitsTherefore, the cell being 256Mb = (256 x 1048576) =268,435,456 bits per cellFormula: (256 x 1024 x 1024)References and credits:http://www.bit-calculator.comhttp://forums.techguy.org/hardware/659955-memory-question.htmlHow_many_bits_of_information_does_a_single_cell_of_memory_chip_a_memory_chip_on_a_256MB_PC2700_DDR_module_hold
DDR. Technically, there is no "DDR1", only "DDR" and DDR2".
Short answer is no.They are not interchangeable.
It supports ddr (first generation - ddr1).
DDR 1
DDR by a long shot
no it support only ddr1 ram
Yes. DDR2 memory has double the transfer rate of DDR memory.
DDR has a 184-pin DIMM interface and DDR2 has 240. DDR2 runs cooler and has generally slower timings but is a lot faster than DDR in the end. DDR2 is capable of holding more ram on one DIMM.
DDR 1 USE 184 PINS THE BEST THING IS TO TAKE DDR AND CHECK THE PIN AREA THAT IS GOLD PLATED YOU WILL FIND WRITTEN 1-96 AND OTHER SIDE 97 -184 THAT MEANS YOU ARE USING DDR1 DDR 2 USE 240 PINS SAME THING FOR DDR2 AND IT WRITTEN 240 MUSTAFA AHMED KHAN DDR 1 USE 184 PINS THE BEST THING IS TO TAKE DDR AND CHECK THE PIN AREA THAT IS GOLD PLATED YOU WILL FIND WRITTEN 1-96 AND OTHER SIDE 97 -184 THAT MEANS YOU ARE USING DDR1 DDR 2 USE 240 PINS SAME THING FOR DDR2 AND IT WRITTEN 240 MUSTAFA AHMED KHAN DDR 1 USE 184 PINS THE BEST THING IS TO TAKE DDR AND CHECK THE PIN AREA THAT IS GOLD PLATED YOU WILL FIND WRITTEN 1-96 AND OTHER SIDE 97 -184 THAT MEANS YOU ARE USING DDR1 DDR 2 USE 240 PINS SAME THING FOR DDR2 AND IT WRITTEN 240 MUSTAFA AHMED KHAN
There are 2 easy ways. No#1- Downlaod a 'system analysis' tool (e.g. CPU-Z) run the progamme and check its window. http://www.cpuid.com/cpuz.php No#2- Open the case, and look at the ram slots. DDR1 has 184 pins, DDR2 has 240 pins. The 'notch' in the ram stick is also in different places on DDR1 vs DDR2. After you have look at a few ram sticks, you can soon pick the difference between DDR1 amd DDR2, but in the beginning it is no so easy. There is quite often a sticker on the side of the ram telling you what type/speed it is to make things easier, but it can be hard to see inside the case. DDR1 also ranges from DDR-200 (PC-1600) to DDR-433 (PC-3500) and DDR2 ranges from DDR2-400 (PC2-3200) to over DDR2-1066 (PC2-8600)
DDR1 has a prefetch of 2n, which means it can store 2 bits of data in each prefetch buffer.
PC133 is an SDRAM standard. SDRAM is a type of RAM.