I learn alot of things, I'm a student of life. I"m just upset that you say it's just synthetic benchmarks.
I highly doubt that the ability of reading and writing speeds in memory don't affect games. How come DDR3 benchmarks of real world gaming beat DDR2?
By that token you're saying that he wouldn't suffer, I highly believe if we both benched our systems with equivalent stats he would lose alot, and that's not synthetic.
I believe that synthetic benchmarks are crock just like you, but a certain line has to be drawn. To say that those kinds of max read and writes won't affect the performance of a memory intensive game, say world of warcraft, isn't a fair statement. If DDR3's prowess can be displayed in some games, by that token it's speed can be shown to be a seperation point between the two (DDR2 and 3) and thus it would translate to real world performance, if it is THAT big of a discrepancy.
If it's hundreds of megabytes I'd agree with you, a few gigabytes, not so much man.
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