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Salvaging Defective DRAM

An anonymous reader writes "Ever wonder what happens to DRAM that fails quality assurance testing during manufacturing? Turns out a lot of it ends up as 'downgrade' memory and ends up in OEM memory modules. Last resort: use it in an answering machine, where the sampled audio can be very tolerant of bit errors."

3 of 211 comments (clear)

  1. Use memtest86 by Black+Parrot · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...and read its documentation to find out how to make Linux skip any defects it finds.

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    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  2. recycling the chips by v1 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I recall seeing an article awhile ago where companies were buying defective memory, and running them in these external testing units,which would identify which chip(s) on the stick were bad. I'm assuming they'd then unsolder the bad chip and recover one from another module. At that time some of those sticks had 8 chips on each side, so you could recover 15 good sticks from 16 bad ones. Considering the price of memory a few yrs ago, it was probably a worthwhile venture. Nowadays though, it's probably not worth anyone's time.

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    I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
  3. Re:well by wik · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Not to mention, give you hell at the airport. The security guys in Pittsburgh told me to put my keys in the little bucket, then when they looked closer, told me to put them through the X-ray machine.

    They were looking at the old 256k SIMM PCB (all chips removed) and asking "is that a computer chip"? Funny how they pointed at that and missed my Intel keyring fob with a real processor die on it.

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