Kingston HyperX Ram modules are on top of their game-and a whole lot more. Plus, if it's advent from Kingston, I'm rest very-assured that I've got a good goods (unless it happens to be one of those notorious Kingston counterfeits-which I had the distasteful sense of buying a "Kingston Ddr2 2 gigabyte modules", only to find out that they were phonies and would not even set-up right in Bios!). Ok, venting aside, let's take a espy at my friends system, its HyperX modules, and various other offerings from Kingston.
My friends law (at least the part that's relevant to this review) is a customized Hp Pavilion with an i7-920 Intel processor that boasts a 2.66 gigahertz (I love to spell it out, yes) with 1 megabyte L2 + 8Mb shared L3 cache and Qpi technology. It also came with 8 gigabytes of Pc3-8500 Ddr3 Ram modules-which, me being the power hungry-never satisfied techy, I just had to upgrade to an additional 8 gigabytes-bringing the total memory to a whopper of about 16 gigabytes (give or take a few kilobytes, I presume).
Ddr2 Ddr3
Two 4 gigabyte chips from Kingston and designated "LoVo" (low-voltage), with the proprieatary HyperX technology embedded and in addition to my existing Ram, it makes for one helluva setup! Sometimes I even wonder if I could run an whole datacenter with this setup, haha. Added to that the frames per second(Fps) I get out of my Rampage ultimate video card quite literally-and pardon the expression-"out the frame".
I love this goods X 1,000. I can't verily say it enough; Kingston makes some of the best computer components ever-and I'm not even saying that to only advantage them, but my fellow online gamers and work associates.
Kingston HyperX Ram Modules
No comments:
Post a Comment