From: ivowel on

Are there any affordable ways to use 50 sticks of 2GB DDR Dimms in a
computer? Obviously, I would love a motherboard that has rows and
rows of computer addressable memory, but I do not believe this
exists. Maybe something emulating a hard drive exists, though. Any
ideas?

sincerely,

/iaw
From: Gary Seven on
ivowel <ivowel(a)gmail.com> wrote:

Yet another crappy troll from that POS domain, gmail.

From: Eric Gisin on
Build a PCI card with a memory controller and DIMM sockets.

"ivowel" <ivowel(a)gmail.com> wrote in message
news:2e243f45-cce2-4199-a1c6-9915554b0ac7(a)m36g2000hse.googlegroups.com...
>
> Are there any affordable ways to use 50 sticks of 2GB DDR Dimms in a
> computer? Obviously, I would love a motherboard that has rows and
> rows of computer addressable memory, but I do not believe this
> exists. Maybe something emulating a hard drive exists, though. Any
> ideas?
>
From: Arno Wagner on
Previously ivowel <ivowel(a)gmail.com> wrote:

> Are there any affordable ways to use 50 sticks of 2GB DDR Dimms in a
> computer? Obviously, I would love a motherboard that has rows and
> rows of computer addressable memory, but I do not believe this
> exists. Maybe something emulating a hard drive exists, though. Any
> ideas?

There are server boards that can support up to 16 fully buffered
modules. Tht is propaby the maximum feasible today. Note that
fully buiffered modules are more expensive.

If you need fast access, ues a solid-state disk instead.

You can, of course, always get a "big iron", but there
is nothing affordable in thet machine class.

Arno
From: Michael Wardreau on
On Tue, 8 Apr 2008 08:54:18 -0700, "Eric Gisin" <gisin(a)uniserve.com>
wrote:

>Build a PCI card with a memory controller and DIMM sockets.
>
>"ivowel" <ivowel(a)gmail.com> wrote in message
>news:2e243f45-cce2-4199-a1c6-9915554b0ac7(a)m36g2000hse.googlegroups.com...
>>
>> Are there any affordable ways to use 50 sticks of 2GB DDR Dimms in a
>> computer? Obviously, I would love a motherboard that has rows and
>> rows of computer addressable memory, but I do not believe this
>> exists. Maybe something emulating a hard drive exists, though. Any
>> ideas?
>>
If you could, you could use it to heat your house, too.