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by p_l
252 days ago
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It was often used to supplement memory available in cheaper ways or otherwise more flexible. For example many hardware solutions allowed connecting more RAM than otherwise possible to be accessed by main bus, or at lower cost than the main memory (for example due to differences in interfaces required, adding battery backup, etc.) RAMsan line for example started in 2000 with 64GB DRAM-based SSD with up to 15 1Gbit FC interfaces, providing a shared SAN SSD for multiple hosts (very well utilized by some of the beefier cluster SQL databases like Oracle RAC) but the company itself has been providing high speed specialized DRAM-based SSDs since 1978 |
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Last time I saw one was with a mainframe, which kind of makes sense if adding cheaper third party memory to the machine would void warranties or breach support contracts. People really depend on company support for those machines.