• @[email protected]
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    5 months ago

    Honestly, I’m more interested in the new motherboards.
    Apparently they made some real improvements to the memory system, supporting up to DDR8000.
    I don’t need that speed, but I would like improved stability. My current system can’t run Handbrake for more than 36hours without things getting weird.

    • @NIB
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      5 months ago

      Normal memory isnt supposed to be 100% reliable. Thats why you have ECC memory, which is used on mission critical computers(servers). It’s more expensive and more reliable but normal memory is reliable enough for most consumer uses and cheaper, thats why it is the default.

      Normal DDR5 modules have something like a “light ecc” function built in but there are actual DDR5 ECC modules that are obviously better.

      PS Your motherboard needs to support ECC memory in order to use ECC memory modules.

      • @[email protected]
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        55 months ago

        ECC is meant for systems that can’t afford a single faiure, but standard memory is definitely meant to be entirely reliable as long as it doesn’t fail.

        I know that sounds like a dumb statement, but when memory fails, it’s never a single occurrence. Anyone who has ever done memory tests on failing memory knows that either it’s 100% functional or complete garbage. If your memory is less than 100% accurate, the results are obvious. You’ll never run a memory test and see only one error at the end.

    • @edgemaster72
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      25 months ago

      That seems like a lot of Handbrake. Not judging, impressed actually. What are you doing with it for 36+ hours straight? And how long would you have it going if not for instability?

      • @[email protected]
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        5 months ago

        4K seasons of shows.
        You can compress Blu-ray quality video down to 10-15% of the space if you throw enough CPU cycles at it. Typically it takes me about 20 hours, per hour of video.