This is indeed a confusing matter.
The current Intel CPU's currently have an *actual* FSB speed of 200Mhz. However, they use a "quad pumped" memory bus that allows the chip to talk to the memory 4 times per clock cycle. Therefore, any advertised Intel FSB speed is only really a marketing term that is 4X the actual FSB Speed. (800 = 200 * 4), (533 = 133 * 4) etc.
Now, your DDR speed is always advertised as double the *actual* speed, because DDR = Double Data Rate, which means it works two times each clock cycle. So, DDR400 works at 200Mhz doubled, and DDR333 works at 166Mhz doubled.
This being said, that means an Intel chip with a FSB of 800Mhz matches up exactly with DDR400. Confusing enough?
And FYI, an AMD CPU with an actual FSB speed of 200MHz is advertised as 400Mhz. So, AMD 400Mhz is basically the same as Intel's 800Mhz FSB
<font color=red>Proudly supporting the AMD/Nvidia minority</font color=red>