Thanks very much for the advice! The suggestion that I can reuse PC3200
memory in an A64 s939 board will probably be the decisive factor. After
doing a bit of research, I found that the MP2800+ and XP3200+ have the same
amount of on-die cache (but the MP runs on 266MHz FSB, whereas the XP3200
uses 400FSB).
Happy new year.
G Couture
<> wrote:
. com...
> Well if you upgrade to PC3200 you'll be able to drop them into the A64
> board when you get it and then you can put your old memory back into
> A7N8X board and sell it. If you do still plan on upgrading to A64, I
> wouldn't buy a new CPU, however, you've asked an interesting question
> and the answer is not so obvious.
>
> I usually tell my Computer Architecture class that the best performance
> improvement they can make is to add as much memory as possible. This is
> a no-brainer when you consider the relative speeds of the virtual
> memory on the hard disk and semi-conductor memory on the MOBO. However,
> with lots of memory on board, will you see a performance boost with
> faster memory and the same speed CPU or vice versa?
>
> This isn't obvious because it depends upon the percentage of the time
> that your code is running out of the on-chip caches versus reloading
> the caches from main memory. Typical cache hit ratios are around 90%,
> so my rough guess is that you'd see more improvement with a faster CPU.
> However, this could be more involved then that.
>
> Arnie
>