Okay so I am in a computer hardware class at college and I have to read this chapter for my midterm tomorrow, and as I am reading I ran across the sentence in the picture I am including. It made me pause for a moment, as I had never heard of "Elixir Memory" before (admittedly I'm a bit new to working on computer hardware) so I did a google search and got some general info and people saying it was generic crap, so my question is if it's as generic and shitty as the sources I found claim, why would the book print that it will give the "best results"? Also, whats your opinions on an A+ Certification textbook basically sponsoring a computer part company? It irritates me because if someone takes the sentence at face value their going to assume that any other brand of memory is inferior.
>he doesn't buy exclusively Elixir memory
>he's not even aware of it
You're like a little baby
>>59294715
Could you please explain it then?
Cause I am ridiculously lost.
It says "you need to also match the manufacturer", so maybe Elixir memory isn't the best in general terms, but it's the one most compatible with the other hardware in the setup?
>>59294843
I believe you are right, there's a picture included in the textbook of an Elixir stick, I didn't notice it until I read your post. The sentence was still kinda worded weird though. It shouldn't have been two different sentences, should have used a comma to connect them.
>>59294715
Its just an example
eilxir i haven't seen for a long time since 2008 or so.
It's a trick question, OP. You're supposed to walk out of the test in disgust when you see it, and then they give you your cert.
>>59294688
all the wizards use Elixir memory...