  Maggs Premium join:2002-11-29 Woodside, NY | That would melt a normal PC
The sheer speed would burn out the HD of a normal PC. Only way to get that is to RAID some drives, and spread the load.
That's almost 10x 100 Mbps for 1 Gb -- Better Luck next time. |
|
  Pichin
join:2001-07-01 Altamonte Springs, FL | I can see it now.. here is my new PC mod "Meltdown"!!! |
|
 mavizao
join:2004-08-21 Brazil
| reply to Maggs Worse.
Memories aren't that fast.
If i'm not wrong our current MAX transfer on memories is around 6 and some gigabytes per second (48gbps)...
So even the memory can't receive that much that fast.
I wonder how they test it. |
|
 jbjetta Premium join:2004-07-23 Laurel, MD | reply to Maggs
in order to do thise they are using solid state drives in a raid formation. Same stuff needed for the big SMP setups these days. |
|
  knightmb Everybody Lies
join:2003-12-01 Franklin, TN
·AT&T DSL Service
| reply to Maggs said by Maggs :The sheer speed would burn out the HD of a normal PC. Only way to get that is to RAID some drives, and spread the load. That's almost 10x 100 Mbps for 1 Gb It said gigaBITS, so it's really 101 / 8 = 12.625 GigaBytes per second. Still fast, that's an entire double sided DVD in under a second. |
|
  pcscdma Chocobo Chocobo Random Battle Premium join:2004-01-14 Winterset, IA clubs:
| reply to mavizao PC3200 DDR has a maximum theoretical bandwidth of 3.2GBytes/second when it is 64bit. It's 6.4 when it's 128bit. You can get a MP machine that has multiple DDR controllers with it such as the Opteron. One controller per processor. A 2P machine will do 12.8GB/s, a 4P will do 25.6GB/s and an 8P will do 51.2GB/s. -- I triple dog dare you to click this. |
|