I dont think that my rig will become obsolete when the time comes for more ram, as im sure in the next 12 months or so, we will start to see games that can utilise more than 6gb, at the moment none of the games take this into account, due to the long production time to make a big title, but it wouldnt surprise me if people start adding more within the next 2 years at the most, due to the triple-channel its either 6gb or 12gb, which is a huge jump in the numbers
The only reason to need 6GB (or 4GB for 99% of people) is if you are running things like Vmware workstation. For gaming you'd get a much better return by buying another graphics card/better processor/SSD or even a nicer monitor.
The only reason to need 6GB (or 4GB for 99% of people) is if you are running things like Vmware workstation. For gaming you'd get a much better return by buying another graphics card/better processor/SSD or even a nicer monitor.
A good example of someone needing and using 12GB. Honestly, a vast majority of computer users don't even know how to make a machine us up a full 6GB, much less 12GB.I recently built my new system and went for the 12Gb, but as a photographer using the 64-bit version of Photoshop, the more RAM the better.
Interesting, what is the source drive for this? Is it already on your HD or coming from the optical drive?I've also noticed a huge reduction in time when rendering out high definition blu-ray videos, but this might be more down to the nature of the i7 cpu than RAM.
use 6GB to be safe --- the memory stick chipset has small fuse inside that sometime blow out so i would agree others with 6GB tha 12GB
use 6GB to be safe --- the memory stick chipset has small fuse inside that sometime blow out so i would agree others with 6GB tha 12GB