Chuck,

I've read a few of your other posts and they kind of scare me.  As a fellow
computer guy, don't you like a challenge?  Don't you want to try out new
hardware that you've never touched before?  There was a point when I had no
experience with AMD's, but I took the plunge.  If you understand computers
and hardware they aren't hard to figure out at all.  Aren't you curious to
try some hardware that you're not familiar with, and to learn?  

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2005 7:26 AM
To: The Hardware List
Subject: Re: [H] AMD CPU question


----- Original Message -----
From: "Greg Sevart" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "The Hardware List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, September 28, 2005 9:42 PM
Subject: Re: [H] AMD CPU question


> Well, they couldn't clock as high, were finicky on memory, and many board 
> manufacturers had to go through several BIOS revisions before they were 
> properly supported...
>

This is another reason I build and sell computers with Intel CPU's. Intel 
has never been as complicated as AMD to me. I have only a G.E.D. and my A+. 
I would have to go to college to learn to build computers with AMD CPU's.

I realize that what I just said is only one person's opinion and some of you

may say Intel is complicated. Intel may be complicated to you, but for 8 
years Intel has been smooth sailing for me.

We all know memory sticks have to be matched, especially the speed. I go 
even further. I inform my customers to go for the gold (have their new 
computer built with 2 or 4 sticks of 512 MB) initially so their RAM sticks 
will be better matched. Adding a stick from a batch that was manufactured a 
year or more later (and perhaps by a different manufacturer) can never be as

well matched as RAM from the same lot as was originally installed. I avoid 
1024 MB sticks because they are still cost prohibitive. My Asus motherboards

support up to 4 GB in 4 1024 sticks, but if you start out with a full house 
(all 4 slots filled) of four 512 MB sticks there is only slight chance you 
would ever feel the need to upgrade your memory. If the customer feels they 
may want to go to 3 or 4 GB of RAM one day, they should bite the bullet and 
pay the premium price for 1024 MB sticks when they have their computer 
built.

Chuck


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