I was recently trying to go for the “hat trick” and multitask the mess out of my uber powerful Intel Core i7
system. It usually lives up to multitasking expectations with a mere
8GB’s of RAM. But I finally asked too much of it when editing some
pictures, encoding a massive 1080p video and keeping all my various MS
Office and desktop apps running all at the same time. It definitely got a
little bogged down and there’s only one reason for that: memory.
I did think at first that I was just being unrealistic. However the good folks at Kingston told me otherwise and suggested we try out their newly released HyperX 16GB 1600MHz Dual-Channel Memory kit. This is one of the same kits that we saw at CES 2010 (video here). Supposedly, it can handle the same tasks and then some. What’s it like to have a 16GB memory kit in your system? In a word, flawless.
I was recently trying to go for the “hat trick” and multitask the mess out of my uber powerful Intel Core i7 system. It usually lives up to multitasking expectations with a mere 8GB’s of RAM. But I finally asked too much of it when editing some pictures, encoding a massive 1080p video and keeping all my various MS Office and desktop apps running all at the same time. It definitely got a little bogged down and there’s only one reason for that: memory.
I did think at first that I was just being unrealistic. However the good folks at Kingston told me otherwise and suggested we try out their newly released HyperX 16GB 1600MHz Dual-Channel Memory kit. This is one of the same kits that we saw at CES 2010 (video here). Supposedly, it can handle the same tasks and then some. What’s it like to have a 16GB memory kit in your system? In a word, flawless.
The reasons for these kits? It’s because motherboards, while advanced in their own ways, also have limitations such as the number of memory (DIMM) slots that can be occupied at once. Just because it has six DIMM slots doesn’t mean you can just pack them with any size module. These are built specifically to be run as a set and have been tested rigorously to meet compatibility requirements.
As mentioned in the Features and Specs, these put the maximum amount of supported memory in your P55/P55A system. Your system will get the maximum benefit of the fastest available memory. Perfect for the most demanding professionals.
We’d like to first point out that the HyperX 16GB 1600MHz memory kit worked perfectly fine in an ASRock P55 Deluxe, ASUS P7P55D Pro, GIGABYTE GA-P55 and P55A-UD6, Intel DP55KG, and MSI P55-GD65 motherboards with the latest BIOS available. We picked the GIGABYTE out of the pile to perform all our tests.
Test specifications include:
sumber : http://www.futurelooks.com
I did think at first that I was just being unrealistic. However the good folks at Kingston told me otherwise and suggested we try out their newly released HyperX 16GB 1600MHz Dual-Channel Memory kit. This is one of the same kits that we saw at CES 2010 (video here). Supposedly, it can handle the same tasks and then some. What’s it like to have a 16GB memory kit in your system? In a word, flawless.
I was recently trying to go for the “hat trick” and multitask the mess out of my uber powerful Intel Core i7 system. It usually lives up to multitasking expectations with a mere 8GB’s of RAM. But I finally asked too much of it when editing some pictures, encoding a massive 1080p video and keeping all my various MS Office and desktop apps running all at the same time. It definitely got a little bogged down and there’s only one reason for that: memory.
I did think at first that I was just being unrealistic. However the good folks at Kingston told me otherwise and suggested we try out their newly released HyperX 16GB 1600MHz Dual-Channel Memory kit. This is one of the same kits that we saw at CES 2010 (video here). Supposedly, it can handle the same tasks and then some. What’s it like to have a 16GB memory kit in your system? In a word, flawless.
- The Price for Speed and Power
The reasons for these kits? It’s because motherboards, while advanced in their own ways, also have limitations such as the number of memory (DIMM) slots that can be occupied at once. Just because it has six DIMM slots doesn’t mean you can just pack them with any size module. These are built specifically to be run as a set and have been tested rigorously to meet compatibility requirements.
As mentioned in the Features and Specs, these put the maximum amount of supported memory in your P55/P55A system. Your system will get the maximum benefit of the fastest available memory. Perfect for the most demanding professionals.
- Test Notes and Configuration
We’d like to first point out that the HyperX 16GB 1600MHz memory kit worked perfectly fine in an ASRock P55 Deluxe, ASUS P7P55D Pro, GIGABYTE GA-P55 and P55A-UD6, Intel DP55KG, and MSI P55-GD65 motherboards with the latest BIOS available. We picked the GIGABYTE out of the pile to perform all our tests.
Test specifications include:
- Intel Core i7 870 Lynnfield Processor
- GIGABYTE GA-P55A-UD6 Motherboard
- Kingston HyperX 12GB DDR3 1600MHz Memory Kit
- Kingston HyperX 16GB DDR3 1600MHz Memory Kit (As Tested)
- Zotac Geforce GTX280 1GB Video Card
- Kingston 128GB SSDNow V+ Series
- Corsair HX750 Professional Series Power Supply
sumber : http://www.futurelooks.com
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