DDR Memory

It's been a long time since DDR memory prices have seen fit to cut us some slack, and this week is yet again, no exception. Browsing through our own RealTime Pricing Engine shows a lot more red items in the deltas column; red indicating price rises. Unfortunately, even DDR2 still has a distance to go until it becomes something that can offer an alternative to the high cost-per-megabyte DDR1 chips have been seeing. On that note, DDR2 acceptance and adoption has been a little faster than some of us initially predicted, but it is a good bit off from becoming the de facto standard among desktop PCs.

In the meantime PC3200 memory shows the best available cost to performance ratio among the popular choices. If you're not going to be overclocking and are satisfied running at stock specifications, then the choices available are pretty much unlimited. This week the spotlight is pointing at Corsair and their PC-3200 512MB Value product. It won't win any awards or break any records in the DDR world but it will certainly get the job done quite well on the cheap. Even when overclocking is not a factor in your purchasing choice, it is still important to stick to larger brands that can offer the best prices including Corsair and Kingston. Remember your memory hierarchy; buy on SIZE, SPEED then LATENCY!

Kingston's HyperX PC-3200 512MB is one product that is worth consideration if overclocking is something you intend to do, or may do later on down the road. This CL2, 400MHz stick should run stably in most overclocked systems and comes with Kingston's lifetime warranty service.

NVIDIA Video Cards
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  • thomas35 - Wednesday, August 25, 2004 - link

    I'm just wondering, why are you guys posting the Saphire 9800 ATLANTIS 128mb as being a 9800 PRO 12mb card? I'm sure you guys would know the difference by now.
  • KristopherKubicki - Tuesday, August 24, 2004 - link

    TheAudit: It seems as though all of the merchants have run out of 5900 and 5950 availability. There are still a lot of 5900XTs though.

    Kristopher
  • TheAudit - Sunday, August 22, 2004 - link

    Why have a lot of the 5900 prices sky-rocketed?
  • KristopherKubicki - Sunday, August 22, 2004 - link

    The XFX GeForce 5900 retails for about $200, which is the one we recommended.

    Kristopher
  • Avalon - Saturday, August 21, 2004 - link

    You can get a Gainward Golden Sample 5900 for $200...which will practically OC to ultra specs. That's a good deal less than a $285 vanilla 6800.
  • Visual - Friday, August 20, 2004 - link

    eep... explain to me, why do you say 6800 prices are still high, and recommend a 5900 "for cheaper" ? the plain 6800 comes below $300 now, and no 5900 is anywhere near that cheap... and you've showed in your articles that the 6800 is faster too.

    also, there isn't a list of prices on the mem page, only comments.

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