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Recommend Kingston.
2g 160
The brand of the 1G 75 console has nothing to do with the memory module.
If you are building a dual-channel memory:
As for what supports dual channels. This is to be said separately.
1) For all Intel CPUs, and AMD K7 products with SOKET462 architecture, whether they support dual channels mainly depends on whether the motherboard has two memory controllers and whether there are two warehouse administrators, because the memory control of the above system is done in the northbridge chip of the motherboard, that is, the organizational relationship of the warehouse administrator belongs to the motherboard, so whether it supports dual channel has nothing to do with the CPU.
2) All the K8 of AMD, as well as the new 754 architecture of Sempron, their system memory controller is in the CPU, that is to say, the organizational relationship of the warehouse manager belongs to the CPU, so this system, whether it supports dual channels, the CPU has the final say, and it has nothing to do with the motherboard. For example, all 754-pin CPUs can only support single channels, not dual channels. All 939-pin CPUs support dual channels.
As for what motherboards support dual-channel? Our common Intel chipset, above 848,865PE (no E, no good), will support dual channels. For other VIA and SIS chipset motherboards, you should check whether it is dual-channel in its product information.
If it's the second case above, you just have to think about whether to buy AMD for 939 or AMD for 754.
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Not necessarily.
If you buy a compatible machine.
Manufacturers that produce motherboards generally do not produce memory.
You can't think of any of the same.
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The memory has nothing to do with the host, only with whether the motherboard is compatible or not.
If you bought a computer a few years ago, the memory may be a generation.
The generation 400 is more expensive, and 1g is about 230.
The second generation is also rising again, 1G 90+ 2G 160+ Take ADATA 800 memory as an example.
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The 1st generation is very expensive, depending on whether your motherboard supports the 1st generation or the second generation, 400 and below are the 1st generation, 533,667,800 are the second generation, they are all very cheap, 2G is between 100 150, the brand has Kingston, ADATA and the like are good but expensive, black King Kong and the like are generally cheap but cheap, miscellaneous landlords don't think about it, now the memory homogenization of the 2nd generation is very serious, the quality of the production of large factories and general manufacturers is the same, which one is cheaper to buy which
DDR400, frequency, that is, DDR400 is 1st generation, DDR533, DDR667, DDR800 are 2nd generation.
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Hello. Recommendations:
1. If there is anhydrous alcohol, add a small amount to the memory slot and brush it several times with a brush.
2. If it's the same, reinstall the system. Because you have new hardware, the original system may not have known the new hardware yet.
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In this case, it should be a compatibility issue. It is recommended to switch to the same brand.
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It is estimated that the contact of the memory is not very good, you can't just wipe the memory module, but also wipe the slot!
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Hehe, the problem of incompatibility can't be solved, I really want to use it for the same one.
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It should be a compatibility issue between the motherboard and the memory.
The speed of adding memory will be felt.
Memory is an indispensable component of a computer (PC, MCU). Unlike dispensable external memory, memory is a component that reads and writes on a bus; Memory is more than just a data warehouse. In addition to a small number of indispensable programs in the operating system to reside in memory, the programs we usually use, such as Windows, Linux and other system software, including typing software, game software, etc., although a large amount of data including programs are placed on external memory devices such as tapes, disks, optical discs, mobile disks, etc., but any data in external memory can only be really used when transferred into memory. >>>More
Mixed plugging is possible, as long as the parameters of the two memories are about the same, in fact, as long as it is not dual-channel, the parameters of DDR memory are similar, generally put the latest maximum capacity in bank0, and then bank1, that is, your 512MDDR400 is placed in bank0 slot (the one closest to the CPU), and 256DDR333 is placed in bank1. Of course, if you mix and plug in, the DDR400 will automatically drop to 333 to run, but the increase in capacity can make up for the lack of speed, and the speed is almost unfelt, if you are running large software, large memory will definitely prevail. You can tell by the speed at which you open a word file. >>>More
To detect whether there is a problem with the memory module, you need to click the start menu control panel, double-click to open the management tool, if the display is different, click the view method in the upper right corner, select the big icon, double-click the windows memory diagnosis in the management tool, click restart now and check the problem, restart, and automatically enter the windows memory diagnosis tool.
You'll want to see what frequency your motherboard can support. DDR400 and DDR667 have different frequencies, of course**, the frequency is different, DDR800 has a higher frequency, so it is more expensive. Changing the memory depends on the clock frequency of your motherboard and CPU, find a matching memory to change, not the higher the frequency, the better, here is a matching problem.