Tea
Storage? I am Storage!
Lateley we have switched over to using Geil RAM for everything. Since .. er .. about December last year, or possibly a little later. Geil market their RAM to the overclocking community, but we never overclock it, just use it for stock-standard systems.
Previously we used a range of stuff, most of it pretty good: Legend, Crucial, Samsung, two or three different flavours of Hynix. But there were always systems that just wern't happy. So we would fiddle about, swapping RAM, sending it home, swapping the RAM again if it seemed like a good idea, swapping out the motherboard and the power supply when all else failed. We learned that you could use RAM X in board Y and RAM Z in board A, but not the other way about. We got very good at juggling things around so as to use up a batch of RAM that didn't want to work properly in our mainline motherboards.
Alwys, we would try to buy quality. Sure, we liked getting value, but not if that meant taking risks. (Tannin lives in terror of Kristi's wrath.) Pay the extra and save lots of trouble was our motto.
But now we are paying lots extra.
We were talked into trying Geil RAM by a regular supplier who is always sending us stuff we don't really want. She is an optimist: sends us weird coloured cases, odd-ball broadband gear, anything she thinks might add to our weekly orders. We don't mind that as she is always helpful, and doesn't mind if we send it back again.
So Alice sent us this funny-looking expensive RAM dressed up in blue heat spreaders. We sold a few bits of it to overclockers - it was about 15 or 20% more than standard A Grade RAM such as Crucial or Legend.
Every now and then we would be having trouble with a recalcitrant machine and, in desperation, we would try some Geil RAM in it. More often than not, it went just fine, and poor old Tannin just had to figure that it was worth losing momey on the RAM in order to solve a service issue. So we started pushing it a bit: recommending that people pay $20 or $40 extra for a system in order to have Geil RAM in it. Quite a few did. After a while, we realised that the system return rate for Geil-equipped systems was significantly lower.
At around the same time, we started getting a fair number of KM400 main boards - that's the (relatively) new VIA all-in-one chipset that replaced the olld ... er ... KM266, I think it was. Same as the old one, but supports Athlon 2500 and up.
KM400s are fussy damn things. Fussy about RAM, anyway. (Why are they fussier than KT-400s or KT-600s?) We used to have a fair amount of trouble with them. But there isn't really much choice: there is nothing else in that market segment. The only other all-in-one chipset is the unlovely Nforce II, and they cost $50 extra. Not a viable option.
So we switched KM400 brands, switched again. Didn't seem to matter which brand we sold, they were always fussy about RAM. Get them matched just so, and they ran like trains. Slip the wrong brand in, and they would come back in after a day or a week or a month. Quite often, we would wind up replacing whatever RAM was in it with Geil (and to hell with the expense).
After a while, we got tired of buggerising about and made an Executive Decision. From now on, Tannin decreed, we would use Geil RAM in ALL our systems, and anyone who didn't like the price could buy their new computer somewhere else. Kristi and I had grave reservations about that — could the old boy still sell his weekly quota of new systems at those prices? In a word, yup. He proved us wrong.
Geil is the best RAM we have ever used. We have used almost nothing but Geil for the last 4 or 5 months, and not once has it given us problems. If a board won't run reliably with Geil RAM in it, it won't run reliably at all - or so it seems to us.
Yup: it's too damn dear, but we don't care. It just works.
I like juzt workz.
Previously we used a range of stuff, most of it pretty good: Legend, Crucial, Samsung, two or three different flavours of Hynix. But there were always systems that just wern't happy. So we would fiddle about, swapping RAM, sending it home, swapping the RAM again if it seemed like a good idea, swapping out the motherboard and the power supply when all else failed. We learned that you could use RAM X in board Y and RAM Z in board A, but not the other way about. We got very good at juggling things around so as to use up a batch of RAM that didn't want to work properly in our mainline motherboards.
Alwys, we would try to buy quality. Sure, we liked getting value, but not if that meant taking risks. (Tannin lives in terror of Kristi's wrath.) Pay the extra and save lots of trouble was our motto.
But now we are paying lots extra.
We were talked into trying Geil RAM by a regular supplier who is always sending us stuff we don't really want. She is an optimist: sends us weird coloured cases, odd-ball broadband gear, anything she thinks might add to our weekly orders. We don't mind that as she is always helpful, and doesn't mind if we send it back again.
So Alice sent us this funny-looking expensive RAM dressed up in blue heat spreaders. We sold a few bits of it to overclockers - it was about 15 or 20% more than standard A Grade RAM such as Crucial or Legend.
Every now and then we would be having trouble with a recalcitrant machine and, in desperation, we would try some Geil RAM in it. More often than not, it went just fine, and poor old Tannin just had to figure that it was worth losing momey on the RAM in order to solve a service issue. So we started pushing it a bit: recommending that people pay $20 or $40 extra for a system in order to have Geil RAM in it. Quite a few did. After a while, we realised that the system return rate for Geil-equipped systems was significantly lower.
At around the same time, we started getting a fair number of KM400 main boards - that's the (relatively) new VIA all-in-one chipset that replaced the olld ... er ... KM266, I think it was. Same as the old one, but supports Athlon 2500 and up.
KM400s are fussy damn things. Fussy about RAM, anyway. (Why are they fussier than KT-400s or KT-600s?) We used to have a fair amount of trouble with them. But there isn't really much choice: there is nothing else in that market segment. The only other all-in-one chipset is the unlovely Nforce II, and they cost $50 extra. Not a viable option.
So we switched KM400 brands, switched again. Didn't seem to matter which brand we sold, they were always fussy about RAM. Get them matched just so, and they ran like trains. Slip the wrong brand in, and they would come back in after a day or a week or a month. Quite often, we would wind up replacing whatever RAM was in it with Geil (and to hell with the expense).
After a while, we got tired of buggerising about and made an Executive Decision. From now on, Tannin decreed, we would use Geil RAM in ALL our systems, and anyone who didn't like the price could buy their new computer somewhere else. Kristi and I had grave reservations about that — could the old boy still sell his weekly quota of new systems at those prices? In a word, yup. He proved us wrong.
Geil is the best RAM we have ever used. We have used almost nothing but Geil for the last 4 or 5 months, and not once has it given us problems. If a board won't run reliably with Geil RAM in it, it won't run reliably at all - or so it seems to us.
Yup: it's too damn dear, but we don't care. It just works.
I like juzt workz.