The Vortex F6 computer by Liquid Nitrogen Overclocking, Inc. is the fastest desktop computer in the world, which has a 5.2 GHz i7-3960X chip. ~Chris
megahertz
Mhz
No, 300 MHz is pretty slow for a netbook or computer. Most netbooks would be around 1600-2000 MHz and computers having about 2400 and up.
MHZ Megahertz
Extremely slow computers, Curiosity has 200 MHZ, Apollo had 1.5 mhz computer. NASA uses Macs and PCs in Mission Control (not Linux).
If your motherboard can support 533 Mhz then no, not at all. If it only supports 400 mhz then yes If your a guru and want to run 533 mhz then overclock... But it think if you are running your ram at 533 as an upgrade, i think time for a new computer buddy :)
yes it does effect speed, if you were to use a ram with a lower mhz it would be slower because it would take longer for you to access and with a lower amount you cannot multitask as much so higher mhz and higher amount = faster pc
he rating for RIMM memory is based on the maximum theoretical bandwidth (in MHz) and included speed ratings of 800 MHz, 1066 MHz, 1200 MHz, 1333 MHz, and 1600 MHz.
MHz and GHz are a measure of frequency. In science frequency = 1/time for one cycle. If a wave takes 0.5 seconds to complete a wave, the frequency is 2 Hz. MHz and GHz in computers measure the same thing. It measures the frequency of the processor (ie, how many cycles it completes in a set time) again, if each cycles takes 0.5 seconds, then your computing speed is 2 Hz. a GHz (giga hertz) is equal to 1000 Mhz (mega hertz) a MHz is equal to 1,000,000 Hz. how is mhz and ghz is measured?
Personal computers were still very expensive in 1990 so although the Intel 80486 microprocessor was in existence, many folks were still purchasing earlier ATs such as the 80286 and the 80386 because that's what was in the home market. Within the entire range of 286 to 486, clock speeds basically managed to creep up from around 16 MHz on the low end to about 33 MHz for the average 386 to 50 MHz for a standard 486. As far as non-personal computers and/or non-IBM compatible personal computers, they were likely running at similar speeds.
MHz. 1000 MHz = 1 GHz.
600 MHz or 800 MHz
Frequency Coverage: VHF-Lo: ................................ 29 MHz -50 MHz (in 5kHz steps) Ham: ................................... 50 MHz -54 MHz (in 5kHz steps) Government: .......................... 136 MHz -144 MHz (in 5kHz steps) Ham: ................................. 144 MHz -148 MHz (in 5kHz steps) VHF-Hi: .............................. 148 MHz -174 MHz (in 5kHz steps) Ham/Government: .................. 460 MHz - 450 MHz (in 12.5kHz steps) UHF-Lo: .......................... 450 MHz - 470 MHz (in 12.5kHz steps) UHF-Hi: .......................... 470 MHz - 512 MHz (in 12.5kHz steps) Channels of Operation.............Any 16 channels in any band combination