← Back to context Comment by alanfranz 2 years ago Did you get the fake in an official box? Or OEM version? This is quite a big claim. 3 comments alanfranz Reply iamacyborg 2 years ago It doesn't strike me as being a big claim, I recently bought some RAM for a NUC a few weeks ago on Amazon only to determine that it was likely counterfeit. It came in an official box with all packaging intact. slowmotiony 2 years ago Then how did you determine it was fake? iamacyborg 2 years ago I installed it in my system after which it had severe stability issues.Running dmidecode showed that the part number didn’t match the sticker on the module.
iamacyborg 2 years ago It doesn't strike me as being a big claim, I recently bought some RAM for a NUC a few weeks ago on Amazon only to determine that it was likely counterfeit. It came in an official box with all packaging intact. slowmotiony 2 years ago Then how did you determine it was fake? iamacyborg 2 years ago I installed it in my system after which it had severe stability issues.Running dmidecode showed that the part number didn’t match the sticker on the module.
slowmotiony 2 years ago Then how did you determine it was fake? iamacyborg 2 years ago I installed it in my system after which it had severe stability issues.Running dmidecode showed that the part number didn’t match the sticker on the module.
iamacyborg 2 years ago I installed it in my system after which it had severe stability issues.Running dmidecode showed that the part number didn’t match the sticker on the module.
It doesn't strike me as being a big claim, I recently bought some RAM for a NUC a few weeks ago on Amazon only to determine that it was likely counterfeit. It came in an official box with all packaging intact.
Then how did you determine it was fake?
I installed it in my system after which it had severe stability issues.
Running dmidecode showed that the part number didn’t match the sticker on the module.