Looks Good & faster is just piece of time, as wiring seems done deal. although strange maybe this is good enough for NT6, needing lots o' space, yet not that quick about it.

Put it in your 790GX with DAT new extra side brain & controller or pumpa da 6 gb/s salon, for that lift off, ?reserve speed.
drashek

PS Charles, You need deeper RED on your Card, Also wouldn't Head Waiter be Primary Duty?.tom.
Gigabyte's best product by far at any time, was the iRAM, merely limited by the technology of the time. 

With these DDR3 MetaRAM modules, we could have 32-128GB iRAM drives in a couple of years, putting them only slightly behind the the SSDs in terms of capacity but far ahead in terms of performance.

Combined with the SATA 3.0 specification, this would provide an awe inspiringly fast memory storage solution, which could be designed to work in conjunction with an SSD for when power failures occur.
Wow, 144GB? Why, that's almost enough to run that piece of cr*p that Microsoft believes is an OS!

And to think that in my yoof, a VAX/VMS system with 4MB (11/780) was more than enough to perform real work for my employer of the time.
Looks Good & faster is just piece of time, as wiring seems done deal. although strange maybe this is good enough for NT6, needing lots o' space, yet not that quick about it.

Put it in your 790GX with DAT new extra side brain & controller or pumpa da 6 gb/s salon, for that lift off, ?reserve speed.
drashek

PS Charles, You need deeper RED on your Card, Also wouldn't Head Waiter be Primary Duty?.tom.
Gigabyte's best product by far at any time, was the iRAM, merely limited by the technology of the time. 

With these DDR3 MetaRAM modules, we could have 32-128GB iRAM drives in a couple of years, putting them only slightly behind the the SSDs in terms of capacity but far ahead in terms of performance.

Combined with the SATA 3.0 specification, this would provide an awe inspiringly fast memory storage solution, which could be designed to work in conjunction with an SSD for when power failures occur.
Wow, 144GB? Why, that's almost enough to run that piece of cr*p that Microsoft believes is an OS!

And to think that in my yoof, a VAX/VMS system with 4MB (11/780) was more than enough to perform real work for my employer of the time.
This looks awsome on an updated i-RAM.
When can we have it?