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Reddit mentions of Kingston Technology HyperX Impact 8GB Kit 1600MHz DDR3L CL9 SODIMM 1.35V Laptop Memory (PC3 12800) HX316LS9IBK2/8 Black

Sentiment score: 3
Reddit mentions: 4

We found 4 Reddit mentions of Kingston Technology HyperX Impact 8GB Kit 1600MHz DDR3L CL9 SODIMM 1.35V Laptop Memory (PC3 12800) HX316LS9IBK2/8 Black. Here are the top ones.

Kingston Technology HyperX Impact 8GB Kit 1600MHz DDR3L CL9 SODIMM 1.35V Laptop Memory (PC3 12800) HX316LS9IBK2/8 Black
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    Features:
  • High performance memory for gaming notebooks, small form factor PCs and Steam Box systems
  • Low voltage setting at 1.35V for cooler and quieter computing
  • Slim and sleek new look compatible with ultra thin notebooks.Operating Temperature: 0°C to 85°C
  • Easy to install; Automatic overclocking; Plug and play functionality means no adjustments in BIOS needed.
  • Reliable:100 percent factory tested
  • Guaranteed lifetime warranty, free technical support
Specs:
ColorBlack
Height0.3 Inches
Length3.75 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateMay 2014
Size8GB kit (2 x 4GB)
Weight0.03968320716 Pounds
Width1.8 Inches

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Found 4 comments on Kingston Technology HyperX Impact 8GB Kit 1600MHz DDR3L CL9 SODIMM 1.35V Laptop Memory (PC3 12800) HX316LS9IBK2/8 Black:

u/Sturm_Templar · 3 pointsr/pcmasterrace

I have a Lenovo Y50 and have overclocked the GPU for the last year. The Y50 in particular has pretty robust cooling and a modest video card, so you can get away with an overclock.

However, I wouldn't recommend overclocking much. I have +100mhz core and +300mhz memory, and that's one of the higher overclocks I've seen on a Lenovo Y50. It typically gets me +5 fps in games. Nothing miraculous, but certainly welcome. I have Samsung-manufactured VRAM in my Y50, which is the most stable apparently. You may not want to shoot for a 300mhz memory overclock, maybe 200mhz or 250mhz.

When you overclock, don't raise the voltage. That'll increase heat too much and risk damaging the GPU. Just do what you can on default voltage.

I've run my laptop this way in games for a year, and it's stable, and temps are safe.

However, I'll point out that the Lenovo Y50 has a godawful TN panel screen; one of the worst I've seen. If you can perfectly follow a Youtube tutorial, I think replacing your screen with an IPS panel will help your visuals a lot more than overclocking. I replaced my Lenovo Y50 screen with an LG IPS panel and it was an awesome decision.

Also worth noting, the Lenovo Y50's default RAM is in a 1x8GB single-channel configuration. Switching to 2x4GB or 2x8GB in dual channel by replacing your RAM would noticeably improve performance and system responsiveness. Even though RAM doesn't usually affect performance much provided it's dual-channel, single-channel laptop RAM is just too slow and actually does make a difference.

Edit: A great compatible Lenovo Y50 screen.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B00MR9K3IG/ref=oh_aui_i_sh_in_o0_img?ie=UTF8&psc=1

Edit: Great compatible RAM for the Lenovo Y50.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B00KQCU3WM/ref=mp_s_a_1_12?ie=UTF8&qid=1497513949&sr=8-12&pi=AC_SX236_SY340_FMwebp_QL65&keywords=ddr3l+ram

u/J-Brosky · 2 pointsr/synology

You should be able to use most DDR3L modules. I use these in my DS418Play without issue. 1866MHz would be better but I got a good deal for the 1600MHz version. From what I understand the 418Play will accept 16GB total memory.

u/Route66_LANparty · 1 pointr/buildapcforme

"Revit Server" is an application that sits on a Windows Server 2012 R2 system to help keep large Revit projects in sync with many designers working at the same time. From what I've read, this is a requirement to keep files synced between multiple designers if any designers are offsite. There appears to be some debate on Revit forums if it's a necessity/requirement for even local groups, if there's a large-number of designers on the same project/server.

The alternative is simply a central File Share that can sit on a NAS device. QNAP and Synology are my 2 goto pre-built brands for small work-group NAS. If the local network is fast enough (i.e. all designers on wired gigabit, not high latency or unreliable wifi), it looks like a central file share is enough for most small teams. Looks like this is the approach by most teams on the same site of less that 10 designers.

It's important to realize that just centralizing files in a Revit Server or a NAS are NOT backups. That's live files you are editing. You'll still want a backup solution. In it's simplest form, a large external USB for the offline backup of your NAS. A more elegant and automated solution would be a second small 2-bay (i.e. cheaper) NAS to backup to remotely. Or even automated Cloud backups if that's your thing.

Onto the parts detail help. If you are just looking for simple, centralized storage NAS: There are now pure SSD solutions. QNAP has the TBS-452A you can fill it with 4x 500GB or 4x 1TB SSDs, giving you 1.5TB or 3TB of RAID 5 storage on your network.

Here's the QNAP TBS-453A SSD NAS shopping list:
------------------------------------------------------------

  • RAID 5 - 1 drive can fail and you keep running fine. Some processor overhead and added latency for the parity calculations. Capacity is Total Space minus 1 Drive's Capacity
  • RAID 6 - 2 drives can fail and you keep running fine. Some processor overhead and added latency for the parity calculations. Capacity is Total Space minus 2 Drive's Capacity
  • RAID 1 - Limited to 2 Drives total. 1 drive can fail and you keep running fine. Almost no latency and processor overhead. Capacity is half Total Space.
  • RAID 10 - 1 drive can fail and you keep running fine. Almost no latency and processor overhead. Capacity is half Total Space.

    ___



    If you actually want a "Revit Server" full Windows Server 2012 R2 Application server, then you are looking at something with far more involved software setup and maintenance. You may want the help of a local freelance Windows Server Sysadmin to get it all configured and maintained. If you are looking for a parts-list for something like that, let me know.