After much further searching, I found a (possibly the) youtube video, supposedly demonstrating the ECC
registered memory usage on a normal motherboard.
Warning: It is dated, worryingly close to April 1st Fools day (March 28th).
I am still rather/very sceptical.
Anyway, he seemed to be using a Xeon cpu, which is one of the things you need to do, to support ECC
registered.
So, the remaining thing would be the motherboard.
Also, it was a fairly old processor/motherboard. maybe such an old one could/did support it, under some circumstances. It doesn't mean you can use ECC
registered memory, in general on non-server motherboards/cpus.
https://youtu.be/OWcf1LP0z1k?t=541EDIT: Correction.
It may still be UNBUFFERED ECC and still not registered ECC.
I re-read my original source, for the video.
Here:
https://linustechtips.com/main/topic/631990-will-ecc-server-memory-work-in-my-x58-motherboard-asus-p6t/An i7 920 will NOT support ecc memory, and the asus board will NOT support registered ecc(unbuffered should be fine with a xeon cpu)
Part where he definitely seems to state it is unbuffered ECC memory:
https://youtu.be/OWcf1LP0z1k?t=60tl;dr
I think some people got confused, and thought he meant REGISTERED ECC, from reading the comments.
I got confused for a while as well (because he keeps on calling it just cheap/'ECC').