mechBgon
Super Moderator<br>Elite Member
- Oct 31, 1999
- 30,699
- 1
- 0
At work, my memory usage is rarely over ~350MB peak, but I still enjoy having 1GB and wish I had 1.5GB like I used to. Why is that? Because Win2000 (or WinXP) will use the "excess" RAM to cache stuff I've used. It doesn't have to drag it back out from the hard drive again if I want it later.
Point in case: PhotoImpact 6 is a slow launcher, taking ~4 seconds to launch from a 15000rpm SCSI drive. It launches in under a second from PC3200 RAM after it's been cached, and it will continue to do that until the system is rebooted or Windows is forced to use that RAM for something else. If I had only 384MB of RAM, I would cover my immediate needs but lose this killer re-launch speed.
The more RAM you have, the more apps and data the OS can cache. Those of you with "too much" RAM, look at your "system cache" and I'll bet that if your system has been in use for a day or two without a reboot, Windows is using most of your RAM to cache stuff you might want later.
At work, I used to cache our entire Office2000Pro Disc 1 & 2 installation-file set in RAM on my own system. That's ~940MB of data and I had 1536MB at the time. For the first computer to pull an installation of Office across the network, my system had to get the files off of its hard drives. The subsequent installs were pumped straight from RAM to the NIC with no HDD activity at all :Q
Needless to say, I was quite pleased. Now those duties have been split off to a separate computer, which is even better in most ways, but it illustrated why "enough" RAM is still not always optimal.
Point in case: PhotoImpact 6 is a slow launcher, taking ~4 seconds to launch from a 15000rpm SCSI drive. It launches in under a second from PC3200 RAM after it's been cached, and it will continue to do that until the system is rebooted or Windows is forced to use that RAM for something else. If I had only 384MB of RAM, I would cover my immediate needs but lose this killer re-launch speed.
The more RAM you have, the more apps and data the OS can cache. Those of you with "too much" RAM, look at your "system cache" and I'll bet that if your system has been in use for a day or two without a reboot, Windows is using most of your RAM to cache stuff you might want later.
At work, I used to cache our entire Office2000Pro Disc 1 & 2 installation-file set in RAM on my own system. That's ~940MB of data and I had 1536MB at the time. For the first computer to pull an installation of Office across the network, my system had to get the files off of its hard drives. The subsequent installs were pumped straight from RAM to the NIC with no HDD activity at all :Q