of course this is opinion but no it is not single 800Mhz processers are very slow with todays aplications and OS todays processors run about 2.0-3.5 Ghz and theres two of them FYI 2 - 3.5 Ghz = about 2024 - 3042 Mhz
600 MHz or 800 MHz
RIMMs operate at speeds of 600 MHZ (PC600) or 800 MHz (PC800). All installed RIMMs must operate at the same speed, and have the same ECC or non-ECC rating. The operating speed is different than the data path size. RIMMs are avilable in 16- or 32-bit data path.
computer bus speed FSB starts from 66 MHz to over 800 MHz.
Is your question incomplete? The pc2 5300 is simply the speed of the ddr2 sdram memory... Dual Data Rate is what DDR stands for The 5300 is the transfer speed. Be careful when selecting clock speeds because many manufacturers will test memory to 800 Mhz and list it at 800 Mhz but it will be factory set at 667Mhz such as the Kingston PC2 6400 1GB module which is really a pc2 5300 that can be overclocked to 800 Mhz You need to match the FSB speed of your system to the memory you select. You wouldn't want to run pc2 4200 with a system that has 1033 Mhz FSB nor would you put pc2 8500 in a system with a 400 Mhz FSB. One will work but slow you down and the other might work or might not but would be a waste of money to buy fast ram for a slow system. I am running Dual Pentium 4 3.0 Ghz processors with 800 Mhz FSB and I selected 4 modules of ram that are 1 GB each running pc2 6400 which is 800 Mhz Ram (400 Mhz IN and 400 Mhz OUT ) This is also why most systems report ram as 400 Mhz when it is really 800Mhz. It is 400 Mhz Doubled. My system is not overclocked and runs very quiet, cool, and stable
1000 mhz is a frequency, not a speed, therefore, there is not an answer.
It's in relation to speed. 533 is slower than 800.
he rating for RIMM memory is based on the maximum theoretical bandwidth (in MHz) and included speed ratings of 800 MHz, 1066 MHz, 1200 MHz, 1333 MHz, and 1600 MHz.
speed ofcource.. 800 mhz PC will be slower than 1099 mhz PC because of slow data rate..
863 Mhz is a type of prossesing speed witch if that's for a processer and that's its maxed then today for anycomputer is extreamly slow now standard proccessors run around 2.0 - 3.5 Ghz witch is around 2024-3060 Mhz
600 MHz or 800 MHz
Common speeds for the system bus (motherboard speed) are 1066 MHz, 800 MHz, 533 MHz, and 400 MHz.
Yes, as 800 MHz is faster than 2GHz, the soft ware will run fine. 1000MHz=1GHz. Any program that requires a certain CPU speed will always run on one of a higher speed
100 MHz
RIMMs operate at speeds of 600 MHZ (PC600) or 800 MHz (PC800). All installed RIMMs must operate at the same speed, and have the same ECC or non-ECC rating. The operating speed is different than the data path size. RIMMs are avilable in 16- or 32-bit data path.
Wavelength = (speed of light) divided by (frequency).In free space, wavelength = (3 x 108) / (800 x 106) = 0.375 meterNote that 800 MHz is in the same general frequency range as many cellular telephone systems.
Yep, Sure can.... If you aren't having any problems with the 800 MHz module then keep it over the 667MHz =)
1066 MHz, 800 MHz, 533 MHz, and 400 MHz