... Ken, please provide links to prove your claims that SRAM is still being used as opposed to asking for links for the opposition. I see no proof that SRAM is still used at all except for in Xbox One and CPU's L3 cache, etc. I also see that its much more expensive and when I attempt to find a laptop using SRAM.. Imagine that, I can't. You appear to have this process down though, so please provide some insight. — Sent from Mailbox On Sun, Oct 5, 2014 at 5:57 AM, ken <gebser@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 10/05/2014 04:58 AM ken wrote: >> On 10/05/2014 04:02 AM John R Pierce wrote: >>> On 10/5/2014 12:48 AM, ken wrote: >>>> >>>> I sincerely *hope* that it isn't some kind of trend that video cards >>>> are using shared memory instead of dedicated memory on the card >>>> itself. All machines I've bought or built since the late '90s have >>>> had video cards with a .5G of dedicated memory. This is mostly >>>> because video memory is physically different, using static RAM rather >>>> than dynamic RAM. The former is something like ten times faster than >>>> the latter. >>> >>> NO video card uses static ram, at least not since the early 1980s. >> >> Perhaps you're intimately familiar with each and every video card >> manufactured since the early '80s except for the ones I bought with my >> machines, because I've always insisted on video cards with static RAM. >> Or perhaps your understanding of static RAM is different from what I'm >> talking about. >> >> >>> >>> the modern CPUs with integrated graphcis controllers such as the Intel >>> HD4500 stuff is excellent, at least on MS Windows systems. the main >>> memory controller on these CPUs has HUGE bandwidth, the video display >>> overhead is lost in the noise unless maybe you're running dual huge >>> screens. a dedicated controller might be 2-3X faster or more at 3D >>> gaming graphics, but its not usefully faster at normal desktop >>> graphics. dedicated controllers use significantly more battery power >>> than integrated ones, a consideration on a portable laptop. >> >> It would be nice to have authoritative sources for these opinions. >> >> Also, the speed of a video card is going to depend a lot on the >> instruction set provided by the particular card and and then also very >> much on how well the software/drivers make use of that instruction set. >> Those factors are going to vary widely, which is why I spoke only to >> the speed of the *memory*. So saying "a dedicated controller might be >> 2-3X faster or more at 3D" is meaningless, like saying 'a car with ABC >> tires might be faster....' >> >> Dynamic RAM actually uses *more* electricity than static RAM. > Here are some sources which support the statement above that dynamic RAM > uses more electricity than static RAM, making static RAM more suitable > for use in laptops and other situations where power consumption is an > important consideration: > <http://computer.howstuffworks.com/question452.htm> > <http://www.wisegeek.org/what-is-the-difference-between-static-ram-and-dynamic-ram.htm#didyouknowout> > <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Static_random-access_memory> > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos