My first "serious" machine was a dual-socket Core 2 box with 64GB. That was back in 2009. Expensive as hell and has very slow memory. But totally worth it since getting my code to scale on that thing meant it would scale on almost all machines for the next 5 years.
@Mysticial That's a sign of good progress, being able to look back and see how far you've come :) And wow, I've never seen that much computer outside of a case
@Aaron3468 I didn't realize it at the time, but the fact that I had 8 cores on VERY slow memory turned out to be a blessing in disguise in the long run.
That machine had one of the worst CPU-speed to memory-speed ratios. It made me completely design everything to be memory-oriented in a way that assumed all memory access was bad.
Memory got a lot faster with Nehalem, but fast forward a few more generations, the problem is coming back. I read about it all the time from people's who stuff stopped scaling after a few cores. And yet my shit had no problems going 32+.
The situation now with 40+ core machines is worse than it was back in 2009. The jump to NUMA-aware programming will be as difficult as the jump from single-core to multi-core.