- Feb 21, 2005
 
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I have 2 GB of Corsair PC3200 XLPRO now all at 2-2-2-5...4 x 512MB....and there doesn;t seems to be any differense compare to 1GB only.....any tweaking in windows i could do to increase performance? Thank you!
			
			Originally posted by: KoolDrew
No. Windows is tweaked out of the box. Take any tweaking sites you come across with a grain of salt.
Windows will try to use all of your memory.
Originally posted by: alkemyst
Originally posted by: KoolDrew
No. Windows is tweaked out of the box. Take any tweaking sites you come across with a grain of salt.
Windows will try to use all of your memory.
however many many motherboards will reduce timings for an extra 1GB or 4 dimms negating the perf. boost for most people. If you are running a server multi-GB's make a difference.
There is a lot of (idiots?) talking how they bought a A8N-SLI machine with 2GB because they are major graphics/movie monguls....they can't afford a dedicated machine/specialty workstation for this endevour but proceed to brag about the 3-4K in software they use (legally????)
being at 2-2-2-5 sucks if at 2T. Get CPU-z and see.
Originally posted by: thriemus
I disagree, file cache can almost triple when you have 2 gb of ram installed. Also many games these days are dvd or 2/3 cds and so more files from the game will remain in memory when you have more ram. As for simple day to day use though, 2 gb of ram is not benificial unless you are running many applications at the same time, or editing large photos in photoshop.
Think about it, If mem usage is 600-700 mb then windows has 300-400 mb free for system cache, if you have 2 gb of ram then this increases to 1300 - 1400 mb of system cache. That works out at over 3 times the amount.
Originally posted by: thriemus
I disagree, file cache can almost triple when you have 2 gb of ram installed. Also many games these days are dvd or 2/3 cds and so more files from the game will remain in memory when you have more ram. As for simple day to day use though, 2 gb of ram is not benificial unless you are running many applications at the same time, or editing large photos in photoshop.
Think about it, If mem usage is 600-700 mb then windows has 300-400 mb free for system cache, if you have 2 gb of ram then this increases to 1300 - 1400 mb of system cache. That works out at over 3 times the amount.
Originally posted by: Wicked2010
While I agree with most of what you said... some of it is indeed far too general.
Almost all applications that require alot of RAM for operation also require alot of CPU during normal operation. So you won't be editing a HUGE photo while playing Half-Life 2. You'll just be doing one or the other... no use multi-tasking a set of applications like this.
Basically what I'm trying to say is that... someone who cares about tweaking performance on their machine, would never consider using 4 x 512 MB for their RAM configuration. The 2T command rate is too big of a hit. Stick with 2 x 512 MB until 2 x 1024 MB becomes cheaper and more common place.
Originally posted by: alkemyst
Regardless of the cache size increasing, you'd be surprized how little it gets used. Search on it and about page commits and faults, etc. Most people aren't even taxing 512MB much of the time.
Originally posted by: thriemus
I disagree. If I am running many applications say 10 Firefox Windows/Tabs, Word, Excel, Visio, Powerpoint, Acrobat, Media Player and more (Which I do on a regular basis because of work) I definately see an advantage using 2 gig of ram and the cache hits noticably improve the performance of my machine.
Originally posted by: bluemaverick
I have 2 GB of Corsair PC3200 XLPRO now all at 2-2-2-5...4 x 512MB....and there doesn;t seems to be any differense compare to 1GB only.....any tweaking in windows i could do to increase performance? Thank you!
I have no idea why anyone would want to have all that open at once...nor an A8N-SLI for a work machine.
Most benchmarks I have seen show a performance hit or no gain from over 1GB of RAM at this time.
Even outside of the 1T / 2T debate, a 1GB stick must have slower timing to refresh fully.
