F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Advanced RGB fusion technology for DDR3 memory modules

Advanced RGB fusion technology for DDR3 memory modules

Advanced RGB fusion technology for DDR3 memory modules

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Fred10244
Posting Freak
937
03-06-2016, 03:59 AM
#1
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Fred10244
03-06-2016, 03:59 AM #1

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Indian_Beast
Member
226
03-08-2016, 05:16 PM
#2
I checked the signs to confirm the sticks were off. RAM modules often include BIOS information, which can help identify their type and compatibility. It’s not uncommon for manufacturers to embed such details in the chip design.
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Indian_Beast
03-08-2016, 05:16 PM #2

I checked the signs to confirm the sticks were off. RAM modules often include BIOS information, which can help identify their type and compatibility. It’s not uncommon for manufacturers to embed such details in the chip design.

M
Martinodinho34
Junior Member
32
03-11-2016, 08:43 AM
#3
Gigabutt continues its troubles once more. It’s a shame to learn about your issues. Avoid buying Gigabyte—they’ve grown even worse than before.
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Martinodinho34
03-11-2016, 08:43 AM #3

Gigabutt continues its troubles once more. It’s a shame to learn about your issues. Avoid buying Gigabyte—they’ve grown even worse than before.

A
Atulerc
Junior Member
17
03-11-2016, 08:28 PM
#4
The system started working after leaving everything unchanged and swapping the RAM. Once RGB fusion loaded automatically at boot, it likely reset all LEDs to default configurations. When you removed RGB fusion and installed a different RAM, the new setup ran smoothly without problems, even after multiple reboots. Regarding your questions, RAM does have BIOS settings, but the actual storage details—like brand, manufacturer, and capacity—are typically managed by the operating system and firmware rather than the physical RAM stick itself.
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Atulerc
03-11-2016, 08:28 PM #4

The system started working after leaving everything unchanged and swapping the RAM. Once RGB fusion loaded automatically at boot, it likely reset all LEDs to default configurations. When you removed RGB fusion and installed a different RAM, the new setup ran smoothly without problems, even after multiple reboots. Regarding your questions, RAM does have BIOS settings, but the actual storage details—like brand, manufacturer, and capacity—are typically managed by the operating system and firmware rather than the physical RAM stick itself.

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Superlettuce19
Senior Member
370
03-23-2016, 03:28 AM
#5
It's a gigabyte RGB fusion tool designed to coordinate the RGB LEDs in devices like the Gigabyte RGB Fusion stick, RGB SSD, RGB RAM sticks, and RGB graphics.
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Superlettuce19
03-23-2016, 03:28 AM #5

It's a gigabyte RGB fusion tool designed to coordinate the RGB LEDs in devices like the Gigabyte RGB Fusion stick, RGB SSD, RGB RAM sticks, and RGB graphics.

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captainskynom
Junior Member
4
03-23-2016, 03:51 AM
#6
Thanks for the response. This has become more common lately compared to the P3 era when these products were reliable. I’ve found better results with Asus, though boycotting isn’t the solution—hopefully Linus can provide some insight.
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captainskynom
03-23-2016, 03:51 AM #6

Thanks for the response. This has become more common lately compared to the P3 era when these products were reliable. I’ve found better results with Asus, though boycotting isn’t the solution—hopefully Linus can provide some insight.

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zKaosPvP
Member
61
03-23-2016, 04:23 AM
#7
I don’t see any logical reason a software could harm your rams quickly. It might be due to a power supply problem or timing issues on an older system with a demanding graphics card. Even so, one case isn’t sufficient to draw strange conclusions. I’ve been using RGB Fusion 2.0 smoothly for the past seven months.
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zKaosPvP
03-23-2016, 04:23 AM #7

I don’t see any logical reason a software could harm your rams quickly. It might be due to a power supply problem or timing issues on an older system with a demanding graphics card. Even so, one case isn’t sufficient to draw strange conclusions. I’ve been using RGB Fusion 2.0 smoothly for the past seven months.

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PlanetZwei
Member
68
03-23-2016, 09:00 PM
#8
Absolutely, have you experienced issues on a DDR3 setup? Even with software running via built-in graphics, another memory module failed after power problems caused the GPU to crash under stress. I’m familiar with system configurations dating back to 2002—volatile RAM means simply pausing it shouldn’t help, especially when firmware attempts to write and damage flash ROMs. RGB fusion 2.0 can affect LED colors on memory sticks. If needed, I could replace the DDR3 RAM for a video and get a refund.
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PlanetZwei
03-23-2016, 09:00 PM #8

Absolutely, have you experienced issues on a DDR3 setup? Even with software running via built-in graphics, another memory module failed after power problems caused the GPU to crash under stress. I’m familiar with system configurations dating back to 2002—volatile RAM means simply pausing it shouldn’t help, especially when firmware attempts to write and damage flash ROMs. RGB fusion 2.0 can affect LED colors on memory sticks. If needed, I could replace the DDR3 RAM for a video and get a refund.

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Rosario17_
Posting Freak
897
04-07-2016, 07:16 AM
#9
Running software on DDR3 differs from DDR4 mainly if there are hardware or power supply problems, not the software itself. If your concern is software-related, try a completely different setup—new motherboard, CPU, RAM, and PSU—and install RGB Fusion 2.0 to test. Repeating the same RAM configuration doesn’t necessarily point to software faults. Issues on the +12V rail can worsen with certain cards and older boards. Your experience building PCs since 2002 is still relevant.
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Rosario17_
04-07-2016, 07:16 AM #9

Running software on DDR3 differs from DDR4 mainly if there are hardware or power supply problems, not the software itself. If your concern is software-related, try a completely different setup—new motherboard, CPU, RAM, and PSU—and install RGB Fusion 2.0 to test. Repeating the same RAM configuration doesn’t necessarily point to software faults. Issues on the +12V rail can worsen with certain cards and older boards. Your experience building PCs since 2002 is still relevant.

T
Tuly
Member
77
04-07-2016, 11:26 AM
#10
T
Tuly
04-07-2016, 11:26 AM #10

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