Introduction
Crucial01
Memory manufacturers will be hoping that the salvo of
Intel
Core i7
launch and the knowledge that AMD plans to move on to using
DDR3 for
its updated Phenom CPUs, probably in February 2009, will provide the
necessary impetus for
expansion of their respective DDR3 line-ups, which, right now, make up
a small portion of overall DRAM sales.
DDR3
pricing has been steadily dropping this year, to the extent
where it's possible to buy a 3GB tri-channel DDR3-1,066 kit for around
£75 and a 6GB DDR3-1,333 pack for £150. Not cheap
as DDR2, sure, but pricing's low enough such that DDR3-based
mainboards will provide the backbone in the majority of
£1,000 base units.
Crucial is banking on this because it
recently
announced
a bunch of
DDR3 kits at keen prices. Knowing this, we're taking a look at a 6GB
DDR3-1,066 pack, to see if there's merit in spending £145 on
decent-capacity memory.
Read on to find out