felix said:
1) Touch the chassis of the PC before removing the module.
Yes, perhaps I was a little short in what I said. I do the same as you actually, resting the arm on the case. I have worn ESD straps for work when having a look around areas with ESD-sensitive stuff (those ones that stick to the underside of your shoes) but I have never worn a wrist strap when working on my own PC. I like to think of myself as already being part of the machine, a wire would just be vanity
I also keep my PC plugged into the mains, but with the socket AND PSU switches in the off position. To be honest I don't think that makes any difference as the potential difference is between me and the case, earthing the case doesn't offer any additional protection.
Isn't there also the issue of speed of modules and not mixing them and also how they plug into the banks in pairs?
Both good points.
SIMMS (single in-line memory modules) required use in pairs. However, these went out with Pentium-1 processors. A P-3 as this will use DIMMS (Dual in-line memory modules). You can do fancy stuff by running pairs of RAM now, but it isn't necessary anymore.
Speed of modules: Well, his P3 will be using PC133 (133MHz front-side bus speed). Now, if he were to take some PC66 or PC100 (perhaps if he burgled a museum) then he would not be able to use that whilst running his processor at full speed. However, if you took his PC133 RAM, you could use that with a computer that required PC100 or PC66. The RAM can run at slower speeds than it is sold for, but not faster speeds (well, possibly a few MHz faster, but certainly not 33MHz faster!)