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Kingston Technology Ships 8GB HyperX Kits for Intel Core i5 and i7 Platforms

btarunr

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Kingston Technology Company, Inc., the independent world leader in memory products, today announced it is adding 8GB dual-channel HyperX memory kits in support of Intel's new LGA1156 Core i5 and Core i7 systems. The DDR3 XMP-ready kits are available in 1600- and 1333MHz frequencies and run at a low 1.65 volts.

The 8GB memory kits help increase overall system performance in 64-bit operating systems including Windows Vista and the upcoming Windows 7. System builders and ultra-enthusiasts who deploy 8GB of Kingston dual-channel memory will find performance increases in such tasks as running virtual machines, video encoding and graphics-oriented applications.



The 8GB kits are the latest additions to the entire family of Kingston's Core i5 and i7 memory solutions. Since late August, Kingston has been shipping 4GB kits in 2133-, 2000-, 1600- and 1333MHz frequencies.

Kingston HyperX memory is backed by a lifetime warranty and free 24/7 technical support. For detailed information please visit the Kingston website.



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title should read...

"Kingston Technology Ships 8GB HyperX Kits for Intel P55 Platform"

shouldnt it?
 
So what?
Does that mean they work better on Intell then AMD mobo's?
 
nah... its a marketing ploy that tricks you into buying new ram every time you change platforms.

its similar to when they say "SLI ready memory" or "crossfire ready memory" when really, both would work identical on any setup. its not like it wouldnt work if you used it on a single gpu setup.
 
Instead of having 4 sticks for 8GB, Kingston is simply using the P55 dual channel launch to launch their 8GB dual channel kit (2 sticks).
 
They should use Blue or Black PC boards to match the Heat Speader better.
 
what's a Virtual Machine?
 
what's a Virtual Machine?

It is an Operating System installed to run within another OS kinda like a program. You have to dedicate a portion of your RAM and at least 1 CPU core to run only task for the Virtual Machine as though it were a separate computer.

Simply put, it is a software based clone of a real computer you can run along side your actual OS on your computer (if your CPU supports the feature).
 
It is an Operating System installed to run within another OS kinda like a program. You have to dedicate a portion of your RAM and at least 1 CPU core to run only task for the Virtual Machine as though it were a separate computer.

Simply put, it is a software based clone of a real computer you can run along side your actual OS on your computer (if your CPU supports the feature).

and what can a Virtual Machine be used to do/achieve?
 
A few different things. Common us is you can boot an OS in something like VMWare or as a virtual machine without dedicating HDD space to it. There is no need for a partition or any major changes to be made to install and test an OS.

You can also get around comparability issues due to your real OS. You have a program that only runs on Windows, but you have a Mac. Install Vista as a Virtual Machine, and install and use the program from within it.

It is also used as a Sandbox environment to test viruses, but most people don't play around with stuff like that. I have and it is fun to watch a virus rape an OS....then I just turn off the Virtual Machine and their is no risk to my PC getting infected.
 
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