Two modules have been revealed, for standard PCs and laptops

May 8, 2012 21:01 GMT  ·  By

Green House is a Japanese company that isn't limited to just one layer of the IT market, something that may not have been made all that apparent in our article about its newest monitors.

Of course, as we said, the company didn't so much release two new displays as it launched one monitor in two color options. But we digress.

What we're here to talk about this time is a bunch of DDR3 RAM (random access memory) modules.

First off, there is the GH-DRT1333-8GB, an 8 GB module designed with the 240-pin standard DIMM shape and interface.

That's right, this is one of those average, run-off-the-mill DDR3 modules that all PCs have. It isn't among the strongest, not even close but, then again, it isn't supposed to be.

We don't have any prices to give at this time, but Green House did disclose that the module has a lifetime warranty.

For those who want to pay slightly less, the company built the GH-DVT1333-8GB, with a 5-year warranty.

The other two 8 GB modules are 204-pin SO-DIMM, making them useful in mobile computers. They are named GH-DNT1333 and GH-DWT1333 and have the same warranties as above.

All products comply with the JEDEC standards and work at a clock speed of 1,333 MHz (as indicated by the names) and CAS latencies of 9T. The voltage is 1.5V.

If we were to guess, work desktops or multimedia PCs are most likely to use these things, as they do not have too high a clock speed but a more than decent capacity.

If one is searching for something more monstrous, and money isn't a problem, the TridentX DDR3 kit from G.Skill, the same company's 16 GB Quad-Channel 2.66 GHz DDR3 Kit and Team Group's Xtreem line, to name a few, are what they should be looking at.