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402 Posts

October 4th, 2019 05:00

Intel Optane memory is basically a small amount of cache RAM installed into an M.2 form factor card.  It acts as a buffer/bridge between slower mechanical HDD's and RAM.  It's primary purpose is to help boost system responsiveness by pre-caching what the OS thinks its going to need next.

Optane in our cases is usually installed in the M.2 socket on the motherboard.  Personally I'd opt for a true NVMe drive as the primary for Windows, with the 2TB HDD for application or general storage.

And yes, Optane will work with 9th gen processors.

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2.2K Posts

October 4th, 2019 09:00

Think of those hybrid HDD drives that have a small amount of RAM used as cache (not to be mistaken with regular drive cache)... same principle.

I remember my friend and colleague implementing SATA's native command queuing in the 2000s. 

6 Posts

October 4th, 2019 09:00

Hello thank you for the quick response.  Yeah I wanted to use the intel optane Memory with the hdd just to save some money and still act fast like an ssd . I'm planning on upgrade to an ssd in a year. Im Definitely going to upgrade to the 32gb hyperX fury with 1tb ssd  now like you said in the future 

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402 Posts

October 4th, 2019 09:00

Even with Optane, you're never going to get SSD performance. It might help with certain things that are constantly being read by the OS, but after a while, an HDD can only throughput at a certain rate.  Similarly, Optane is limited in terms of cache size. 

Think of those hybrid HDD drives that have a small amount of RAM used as cache (not to be mistaken with regular drive cache)... same principle.

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2.2K Posts

October 4th, 2019 09:00

@JoeSkieez, I'd advise you to be careful of this:

32gb: 16gb intel optane Memory + 16gb hyperX fury 

Another forum user just bought a system thinking that it has 32GB of RAM. That is not true. There is only 16GB of RAM while the 16GB Optane is like @amstel78 mentioned, a booster for the HDD, to make it behave like its speedy brother, the SSD. If you want 32GB RAM and fast storage, you'd want to go with 32GB HyperX fury ($$$) and 512GB/ 1TB SSD ($$$).

It's 2019, let's try not to use HDDs unless for very good reasons. If it's about cost, just cut down on the number of Steam games purchased in the next sale.

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402 Posts

October 4th, 2019 11:00

@GTS81  brother, we've come a long way since then!  My first PC was back in the 80's.  It was an 8086 IBM PC with a 10 or 15 MB MFM hard drive... maybe it was RLL.  Can't remember now.  But wow, I'm so happy to have lived through 5.25" floppies, then the invention of 3.5" discs, CD-ROMs, etc.  Back in the day, quality video games came from Sierra and you were the cool kid on the block if you had a Sound Blaster card and could play around with Dr. Sbaitso... how many people here remember that program?

Now, all the kids I know that play video games are like shooter this, shooter that!  LOL.. I did eight years in the 1st AD, 2nd BGD combat team.  Somehow shooting people in real life isn't much like the video games... although I do appreciate the advancements in graphics. 

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2.2K Posts

October 4th, 2019 11:00

@GTS81  brother, we've come a long way since then!  My first PC was back in the 80's.  It was an 8086 IBM PC with a 10 or 15 MB MFM hard drive... maybe it was RLL.  Can't remember now.  But wow, I'm so happy to have lived through 5.25" floppies, then the invention of 3.5" discs, CD-ROMs, etc.  Back in the day, quality video games came from Sierra and you were the cool kid on the block if you had a Sound Blaster card and could play around with Dr. Sbaitso... how many people here remember that program?

I didn't know Dr. Sbaitso but I could attest to the cool kid factor. Refer to #2 below. Who can resist the best MIDI-maker on the street when the card churns out the Airwolf song better than what was played on TV?

Started in 1988:

  1. 8088 IBM PC clone + 20 MB HDD (upgrade) + 2x 5.25" + CGA monitor
  2. 486DX2-66 + Aztech multimedia PC upgrade pack (4x CDROM + wavetable synthesis soundcard!)
  3. Cyrix MMX PC - best left behind as a bad memory for random reboots
  4. Pentium III 450 MHz - too poor for a Voodoo graphics 3D card until Sound Blaster came along with its cheap-er 3D Blaster AGP card.
  5. Long series of back-to-back Dell laptop purchases from 2004 - 2018. I call that the lost decade. 

It's been a long way since then, and it's gonna be even more exciting moving forward. This Optane thing is just the tip of the iceberg.

6 Posts

October 4th, 2019 12:00

Thanks for the info

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402 Posts

October 4th, 2019 12:00

@GTS81did you ever own one of those Turtle Beach wavetable/midi cards?  Those things were so cool. I think I had one before convincing my dad to buy a Soundblaster.  I don't know how old you are, but I was born in '78 so that oughta give you a good reference.

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