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memory upgrade, memory upgrades, toshiba laptop memory, sony memory stick, sony memory sticks, sony memory, sony memory stick 128mb, macintosh memory upgrade, powerbook memory, sony notebook memory, packard bell memory, packard bell memory upgrade, samsung memory, thinkpad memory, video card upgrade, sony memory stick 256, sony vaio memory, wheel mouse, toshiba notebook memory, packard bell memory upgrades, pc memory upgrade, presario memory, quality memory upgrades, sony memory cards, sun sparc memory, toshiba tecra memory, what is ram, what is rd ram, www.4allmemory.com, xerox memory As noted in the introduction, there''s a virtual alphabet soup of memory types: SDRAM, EDO, FPM, SIMM, and DIMM. It certainly can create a great deal of confusion. RAM itself stands for "random access memory," meaning the CPU can access any memory address without reading all addresses before it. (ROM—read only memory—is random access, too, but you can''t write to it). It gets worse, because memory comes in different speeds, and some types don''t work in some systems. Here''s the rundown on the three memory types used in today''s systems.... SDRAM. Synchronous DRAM SDRAM''s speed is typically measured in MHz (for example, 100MHz), although you do see references to 10ns SDRAM ("ns" stands for nanosecond or one billionth of a second). SDRAM for PCs comes in DIMMs. These refer to SDRAM DIMMs rated at different memory bus speeds. For any CPU running at a 100MHz bus speed you should get SDRAM. Some future motherboards will support SDRAM. macintoshmemoryupgrade Although there''s a price premium, SDRAM will run in a PC100 system. As noted in the introduction, there''s a virtual alphabet soup of memory types: SDRAM, EDO, FPM, SIMM, and DIMM. It certainly can create a great deal of confusion. RAM itself stands for "random access memory," meaning the CPU can access any memory address without reading all addresses before it. (ROM—read only memory—is random access, too, but you can''t write to it). It gets worse, because memory comes in different speeds, and some types don''t work in some systems. Here''s the rundown on the three memory types used in today''s systems.... SDRAM. Synchronous DRAM SDRAM''s speed is typically measured in MHz (for example, 100MHz), although you do see references to 10ns SDRAM ("ns" stands for nanosecond or one billionth of a second). SDRAM for PCs comes in DIMMs. These refer to SDRAM DIMMs rated at different memory bus speeds. For any CPU running at a 100MHz bus speed you should get SDRAM. Some future motherboards will support SDRAM. macintoshmemoryupgrade Although there''s a price premium, SDRAM will run in a PC100 system.
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