Wow, what is it? Big data/machine learning type stuff?Hah, I have a program that I am working on that should be able to use all that RAM and more.
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Wow, what is it? Big data/machine learning type stuff?Hah, I have a program that I am working on that should be able to use all that RAM and more.
You won't feel a difference until windows bloats some more. People had 16GB when 8GB was 'enough' but once the bloat happened, suddenly 8GB wasn't enough. You're just ahead of the curve and won't feel the pinch that 32GB users will.My home machine was upgraded from 32 GB to 64 GB of DDR4 3600. No noticeable difference. Mostly gaming.
32gb is plenty for 4k gaming imo, just upgraded from 16gb, added another 16 to hit 48gb, overkill lol but the ram was cheapMy home machine was upgraded from 32 GB to 64 GB of DDR4 3600. No noticeable difference. Mostly gaming.
1. Prime number sieveWow, what is it? Big data/machine learning type stuff?
I used to say that bout 4MB...just sayin'16GB has always been perfect for my need
lol I did the same to 64. Total overkill but the ram was cheap.. lol32gb is plenty for 4k gaming imo, just upgraded from 16gb, added another 16 to hit 48gb, overkill lol but the ram was cheap
Yeah totally--I think the cheapest I've seen is like 19 cents/gb.Just ordered 192GB of server ram. DDR3 is cheap.
I did the same here. Got a a few 64GB sets pretty cheap on sale so I figured why not.I just moved from 32 to 64. I dont yet need more than 32 but i am selling some stuff and decided to keep an extra set of b-die i had in another rig and added it to my main rig. Have not tweaked it that much but its running 3600mhz at cas 14 which makes me happy because everyone says its hard to run 4 sticks (especially double sided / dual rank), at good speeds.
What would the equivalent speed be in ddr5 cas 32 for example? In other words does that super low cas make up the difference in MHz power?I just moved from 32 to 64. I dont yet need more than 32 but i am selling some stuff and decided to keep an extra set of b-die i had in another rig and added it to my main rig. Have not tweaked it that much but its running 3600mhz at cas 14 which makes me happy because everyone says its hard to run 4 sticks (especially double sided / dual rank), at good speeds.
What would the equivalent speed be in ddr5 cas 32 for example? In other words does that super low cas make up the difference in MHz power?
yea 32gb is good, i have 48, a little overkill but nice to haveI think games play smoother with 32Gb vs 16Gb, bloatware / windows / game can eat 12 to 13Gb itself !
Todays overkill is tomorrows minimum requirement.yea 32gb is good, i have 48, a little overkill but nice to have
Same for me, easy choiceNext build, whenever it happens and whatever it happens to be on, will be 64gb+.
Yep, I'm doing the same.Next build, whenever it happens and whatever it happens to be on, will be 64gb+.
Would it? The more memory, the more stress on the memory controller.If I was a memory manufacturer this thread would fill my heart with joy.![]()
TechSpot will run a 30 year study on exactly this conjecture... one of these days.Would it? The more memory, the more stress on the memory controller.
Just run a stoopid amount of VMs and realize how little you really need all your other computers.I was planning to outfit my Threadripper 1950X build with 256 GB of unbuffered ECC DDR4 soon.
Turns out I got a Lenovo x3650 M5 server with a whopping 768 GB of registered DDR4 for less than the former plan would've cost - more RAM than I really know what to do with right now, especially on a server with just a pair of 8C/16T Haswell-EP CPUs to run VMs on, but I'm glad I have it.
Ludicrous ZFS ARC cache? iSCSI RAM disk? There's a few possibilities here, and I'm pretty sure that I wouldn't need to allocate a ton of RAM to any dedicated server VM instances I have in mind.
I would think any developer who requires more would have a quick push back (no sales!)32gb is plenty for 4k gaming imo, just upgraded from 16gb, added another 16 to hit 48gb, overkill lol but the ram was cheap
Yeah, after seeing games from the DOS days gobble memory and more and more until today doesn't seem like this will ever end.I would think any developer who requires more would have a quick push back (no sales!)
I can't quite get away with that for my main 12700K/RTX 4080 box; Alder Lake steamrolls Haswell-EP in sheer performance, the RTX 4080 won't even fit inside due to the massive heatsink, and VR is so latency-sensitive that even the abstraction of a VM might just add to undesirable performance stutters.Just run a stoopid amount of VMs and realize how little you really need all your other computers.I have enough servers to do this HA style, but haven't gotten around to it yet.
It has always been a balance. If specs for a game are pushed too far then no one buys.Yeah, after seeing games from the DOS days gobble memory and more and more until today doesn't seem like this will ever end.
I didn't think TR could take that much...?I was planning to outfit my Threadripper 1950X build with 256 GB of unbuffered ECC DDR4 soon.
Turns out I got a Lenovo x3650 M5 server with a whopping 768 GB of registered DDR4 for less than the former plan would've cost - more RAM than I really know what to do with right now, especially on a server with just a pair of 8C/16T Haswell-EP CPUs to run VMs on, but I'm glad I have it.
Ludicrous ZFS ARC cache? iSCSI RAM disk? There's a few possibilities here, and I'm pretty sure that I wouldn't need to allocate a ton of RAM to any dedicated server VM instances I have in mind.
To me it seems if the visuals are worth it, people will find a way to spend for it. It still shocks me today that people will buy a video card that cost more than whole systems did back in the day, especially considering how many people are doing it because back in the day, no one had this type of money for a computer, and today suddenly everyone has $1k for a video card, $1k for a phone, etc.It has always been a balance. If specs for a game are pushed too far then no one buys.
I didn't think TR could take that much...?
Yes, but a 1950x is NOT a pro.Threadripper and Threadripper Pro are two different things. TR Pro takes registered RAM, which allows for more slots and higher capacity per DIMM.