I think Microsoft Office is a great piece of software. I thought Office 2003 was good, not great. But Office 2007 and Office 2010 were perhaps the best pieces of software that I've ever came accross. One of the things that I liked most is that, although Office is a very capable and full-featured product, it has such a small memory footprint.
I am currently using Office 2010 under Windows 7. When I edit a quite complicated 100-page document, full of footnotes and cross-references, Word 2010 consumes only about 50 MB of RAM. Sometimes it may consume a little more memory, but not too much more. It hardly goes over 100 MB.
I am also testing Office 2013 under Windows 8 on the very same laptop, but on a different partition. Word's behavior is completely different here. Word is easily consuming more than 100 MB of RAM all the time. Just by scrolling a 40-page document (which has no sryles, no footnote and no cross-references), Word took over 500 MB of RAM, and, when I scrolled faster, it surpassed 900 MB!
Is this behavior normal or am I doing something wrong? Did somebody also find the same issue while testing Office 2013?
I am currently using Office 2010 under Windows 7. When I edit a quite complicated 100-page document, full of footnotes and cross-references, Word 2010 consumes only about 50 MB of RAM. Sometimes it may consume a little more memory, but not too much more. It hardly goes over 100 MB.
I am also testing Office 2013 under Windows 8 on the very same laptop, but on a different partition. Word's behavior is completely different here. Word is easily consuming more than 100 MB of RAM all the time. Just by scrolling a 40-page document (which has no sryles, no footnote and no cross-references), Word took over 500 MB of RAM, and, when I scrolled faster, it surpassed 900 MB!
Is this behavior normal or am I doing something wrong? Did somebody also find the same issue while testing Office 2013?