Re: computer parts in china
Taiwanese brand ADATA is quite good price/ quality than those chinese King???. http://item.taobao.com/item.htm?id=9246182878 tel: http://360life.taobao.com/
Compatibility: Go to mall & test in shop if u afraid shop online . If booted OK, 99% + chance good.
Re: computer parts in china
Thanks, HB. Nice tip. I'd not found any 4gb chips in taobao. Price is good too, and this shop is in Shanghai so conceivably I can drop by and do the upgrade on the spot.
cheers!
Re: computer parts in china
Dear Humanbeing,
Followup question: These 4gb chips are not widely available in Shanghai, and it looks like Adata has only a 1333MHz version, not the 1066MHz that my Mac requires. In the shop of course they say the 1333 "will work just fine" but I'm skeptical. With a more careful taobao search i've identified quite a few 4gb ram chip choices.
Should I insist on 1066 or is it ok to go with 1333? Price for the 1333 from Kingbridge(?) or Kingstone(?) was 295 rmb.
thanks!
Re: computer parts in china
Faster chips (1333Mhz) should work fine running at slower speeds, I've done that before, but never in a Mac. I suspect it will work. If you are buying it from a shop, and they install it while you are there, if the laptop starts up at all, you'll be fine. Just check the 'About this Mac' and make sure it says 8gb of ram.
295 rmb seems cheap, is that for two 4gb sticks or just one? For one, that would be comparable to the US, for two, its very cheap.
In the states, NewEgg.com sells Kingston 2x4gb 1066mhz for about $87. (I'm not sure that is the same Kingston you are looking at).
Re: computer parts in china
Dear Josh,
Thanks for the reassurance about clock speed. I've found quite a few Taobao shops offering the 1066 from Samsung for 300-320 per stick. And Newegg.com.cn is in the same neighborhood, a bit higher. So should be able to do this for about $100. Funny, looking through various threads about upgrading -- these same chips were abou $300 only a year or so ago. Next year: $25...
I see you are posting in daytime. You over your jet lag?
cheers!
Re: computer parts in china
Quote:
Originally Posted by
euphonius
Thanks for the reassurance about clock speed. I've found quite a few Taobao shops offering the 1066 from Samsung for 300-320 per stick. And Newegg.com.cn is in the same neighborhood, a bit higher. So should be able to do this for about $100. Funny, looking through various threads about upgrading -- these same chips were abou $300 only a year or so ago. Next year: $25...
Yeah, memory is funny/depressing like that... We've got sticks of ram lying around the office that cost a couple hundred dollars new, and now they are worthless.
I didn't know there was a newegg.com.cn, I should check it out. I wonder if they have a warehouse here in China. I keep suggesting there is such a market here for my company's warehousing solution, but people at my company are gun shy about the intellectual property issues.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
euphonius
I see you are posting in daytime. You over your jet lag?
Yeah, mostly. I was on a Skype meeting last night around 11 and dozed off, but other than that, I'm pretty adjusted.
Re: computer parts in china
Macs we all known for their delicacy, can you access to Crucial ram?
p.s. google.com and gmail.com are crawling today:confused1:
Re: computer parts in china
Dear TD,
would love to find Crucial, but don't see what I need in TB. looking at Samsung and Maglite (美光). I've done RAM upgrades in macbooks before with no problems, but I'm reluctant to use a 1333MHz chip when system expects 1066MHz. Of course I know nothing about RAM and how clock speeds actually work, etc, etc....
Re: computer parts in china
Euphonius,
I take back what I said before. It SHOULD work, and it MIGHT work, but I guess Apple's boot process can be a bit finicky. I found a few links online:
http://discussions.apple.com/message...ageID=10821129
http://www.mactalk.com.au/24/82168-t...09-models.html
So personally, I would be quite surprised if the 1333 didn't work, BUT if you want to err on the safe side, I'd find 1066 ram.
I've got 8gb of 1066mhz ram in my Macbook Pro, you can order me some 1333 mhz ram and I'll send you my 1066. :lol8:
As for how it works, often-times the chips come off the exact same manufacturing line, at the same time. During final validation, the QA process tests the chips at varying speeds until they fail, and then mark them at whatever speed they are comfortable rating them at.
I don't know if you remember the days of 486SX and 486DX processors, but the DX had an on-board floating point processor and the SX didn't. Supposedly, the SX and DX actually had the same manufacturing process, and both actually had the extra processor, but if test showed the floating point processor was bad, they would disable it and sell the chip as an SX:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_80486SX
Anyway, as far as I understand it, chip speed verification is basically the same thing... if the chip likes the faster speed, it gets rated faster. Naturally, there are fewer chips that like the higher speed, so the price is higher.