![]() I have read that registered memory was a crutch to quicken the pace of technology (more capacity/channels) at the time for the cost of performance and power consumption. My work station circa 2011 takes ECC "E" (unbuffered at the time) and my server circa 2006 takes ECC "F" or fully buffered, which then for a time was labeled "R". You usually cannot mix them, but sometimes enterprise server boards can accept both with "R" usually allowing more installable memory capacity I think.įurther there was/is? a "U" which is unbuffered non-ECC. They both are ECC, but they both are NOT registered. To extrapolate, the "E" memory does not have the additional registers and is unbuffered. Sometimes registered memory is called buffered memory. Type: DDR3 ECC Unbuffered NON-Registered Memory Frequency: 8GB 2RX8 PC3-12800E. As pointed out in the comments, the "R" memory is registered which "means it has additional buffers".
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