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RAM surely was important, but the exact kind of internal operation mode.. Not that much, I suppose.
What matters was if it had parity, how short access time was (ns), which voltage it had used, if it was doubled-sided or not (later types).
I assume, in practice, things like FPM or EDO were rather silently assumed depending on RAM type or form factor.
As a rule of thumb, 30pin SIMMs were FPM by default, 72pin PS/2 SIMMs were EDO by default.
Especially since systems using SIMMs were 286/386/486 PCs, which all supported FPM but not necessarily EDO.
Later 486 PC mainboards had EDO support, but by that time the PS/2 SIMMs were the new star.
I think that's comparable to EPROMs of the time.
If someone was going to program an 2764 EPROM, it was important if it was CMOS or not (27C64 or 2764), how high the programming voltage was (ca. 12v, 21v, ca. 24v), how high access time was (ns).
However, who really checked in the datasheet which programming sequence was needed for each EPROM?
In practice, most users never cared. They've used that 100µs pulse standard sequence from the 1970s (!) rather than the recommended sequence by the manufacturer.
Probably also because the old C64 software they've used for the programmer didn't feature anything else.
That being said, my father and me never ripped of customers per se.
The worst we did was to convince them to have more RAM, which payed off when new Windows versions were released.
It was common practice in PC selling business in the 90s to ripp of users/customers, though.
The story with the fake caches comes to mind, for example. There's an article about it.
http://redhill.net.au/b/b-bad.php#fakecache
To make matters worse, only a few customers really had a precise idea of what they wanted, but were rather vague about it.
Also probably because everything was changing so fast at the time.
If a family member or friend giving advices for buying a new computer was a C64 user with knowledge from 5-7 years prior, it wasn't really helpful, either.
The confusion that stemt from it wasn't to be underestimated.
Edit: Then there were certain users who cared about the Megahertz and the CPU, simply to be able to brag about it.
- They wanted, say, a 33, 50 or 100 MHz computer, no matter the underlying architecture (386, 486, 586).
- Or they demanded for, say, a 40 MHz 386 PC or 486 PC, but didn't care if it was SX or DX or if it had any motherboard cache or not.
It was simply about the numbers. They wanted to be able to brag about it in the public.
Edit: My apologies for the bad wording here. I'm typing this on a tablet computer right now.
What I meant to say was that certain technical details went into background in daily life for various reasons.
But sure, computer enthusiasts did care about them. Just like they care if a game is running at 15 fps or 21 fps.
Ordinary users.. not so much. They rather cared if the overall experience was smooth or not, if the PC worked trouble-free or not.
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In what to one race is no time at all, another race can rise and fall..." - The Minstrel
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