I just ordered my T60..2623D4U, and I wanna upgrade its memory to 2GB (2 x 1GB).
What memory brand.. and model. should I use?
Thanks for your attention and patience

I have friend with MBP and having the exact same experience, so far no solution.hoya wrote:notice all the MacBook people getting blue screens with the $89 corsair? could be that $60!
I feel exactly the same way. I would like to know the differences in the various brands myself. Also I try to remind myself that reviews are written by individuals that may have an adjenda against a particular company. I would love to save $60 if I knew I would get high quality, reliable ram. It's my very busy schedule (like everyone else) that has influenced me to stay with what my personal experience has proved to be a great product. Having to return a defective product, and essentially doing the job twice costs me more than $60.donking! wrote: So I'm still wondering what the difference between Crucial and Gigaram or Patriot are? It is possible to find bad reviews of Crucial, including RAM modules that fail and cause crashing (look at resellerratings.com and sort for people who gave low ratings--although in general Crucial gets a very high rating there). Anyway, I don't doubt the quality of Crucial's product. I'm just wondering what the difference is (if any) from other well rated products that sell for $60 less.
Is it just some small risk that I might have to send my module back for another one?
It's true that reviews are written by individuals. But on Newegg the Patriot memory has 21 reviews, Corsair has 15, and Gigaram has 32. I figure if a module has 32 reviews which are almost all very positive, that's a pretty good sign (there will always be a couple people with bad experiences, this is even true, as I pointed out, with Crucial memory). So I read reviews as groups of reviews.archer6 wrote:Also I try to remind myself that reviews are written by individuals that may have an adjenda against a particular company.

This thread has peaked my interest, as I have not paid that much attention to the subject once I became a Crucial customer quite some time ago. Kind of like if it's not broken, don't fix it. I always order my ThinkPads in the standard configuration so as to not delay the shipping time. Then I purchase the Crucial ram from the online company that has the best prices.donking! wrote:It's curious that Corsair seems to be the preferred alternative here, after Crucial. Again, on Newegg, out of quite a few customer reviews, overall Patriot and Gigram are distinctly higher rated (in terms of problems) than Corsair.
I understand that Crucial is probably (probably, I repeat) more reliable than Gigaram and the best of the less expensive memory. But I still don't understand how it justifies a price that's almost twice the cost. $89 vs. $156.BudC wrote:I've dealt with Crucial for years and will continue to do so.
As for price, there is a saying that you don't always get what you pay for but you never get what you don't pay for.

you will if you do things that are memory intensive. Your computer supports 5300, so that is what you should get. Also, if your other stick of memory is 1gb as well, you will need 5300 so that your sticks can run in dual channel mode. if you get a 4200 stick, your other stick (even though it is 5300) will drop down to 4200 to match the new stick.GoofyG28 wrote:Does it matter if it's PC2 4200 vs. PC2 5300? The Gigaram DDR2 533 (PC2 4200) is only $76. The DDR2 667 (PC2 5300) is $84. If I won't really notice the performance difference, I might as well save another $8 (10%!).
They are great! Just made my purchase last night. Their automated system could've verify my shipping (work) address on my credit card, so I had to call in. They were very responsive and courteous, both on the phone and via e-mail. Excellent service!!! Highly recommended.markgreene wrote:I had never heard of this site Goofy, thanks!
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