On 6/3/2014 2:58 PM, Lists wrote:
This may be industry standard, and I understand that. I just think that it's a poor showing that this is what you have to do to take advantage of technology meant to be more reliable than "consumer grade" stuff, which somehow manages to be quite reliable even if you mix and match.
consumer non-ECC memory will just pass occasional bad bits under those same circumstances of mismatched timing or voltages or whatver.
I do suppose noone remembers the SDRAM (pre-DDR) where AMD systems would support 256MB single rank DIMMs but Intel systems only supported 128MB single rank and the rather rare 256MB dual rank (oft called double sided because they usually were) but often had problems if you used 4 of these.
in fact, my previous Intel Core2Duo desktop was unreliable with 4 dimms, yet rock solid with 2, and this was regardless of the timing. 4 dimms would boot, pass memtest, etc, but the system would randomly lockup with no clues. ECC would have thrown a fault the instant there was a bad bit.
dynamic memory is much more complex than it superficially appears.