Archived from groups: alt.sys.pc-clone.dell (
More info?)
On Mon, 1 Aug 2005 16:43:22 -0500, in alt.sys.pc-clone.dell, "S.Lewis"
<stew1960@mail.com> wrote:
>And this is all helpful information. As an aside, I have to wonder how many
>people actually have need of more than 1gb of RAM anyway. I feel sure that
>there are some engineering types out there who may need it, but even the
>most avid gamers I know are using 1gb with the most demanding games and
>doing fine with that.
Main reason I posted was that nobody else had mentioned the limited
usefulness of adding memory beyond 2GB. Figured the original poster should
at least have some sort of heads up on that.
As far as the benefit of the memory:
First, it may not make a major difference for most people today, but memory
demands go up steadily. 256MB of memory was considered a large amount not
too many years ago, but now it's not that great.
Second, I may not need 2GB of memory and a dual-core CPU all the time. But
when I do make use of the extra capacity, it makes a world of difference.
On my old faithful Dim 8100, if I had a demanding, CPU-intensive task
running in the background, it would bog the computer down and really have a
big impact on my ability to do anything else at the same time.
With my XPS 5, 2GB of RAM, and 3.2GHz dual-core, I can run intense tasks in
the background and still get pretty much normal response from whatever else
I'm using at the same time.
During one of the recent dual-core vs. single-core threads here, as an
experiment I decided to run two CPU-intensive applications at once.
According to task manager I was using roughly 90% or more of the CPU for
those two applications. Yet I barely noticed it while browsing the web,
reading and posting in newsgroups and web forums, and doing other odds and
ends. If I'd tried that on my single-core Dim 8100, I would have been
screaming in frustration at all the slow downs and lagginess.
I don't put that kind of a load on the CPU on a regular basis, but it's nice
to know I can keep using the computer even when it's doing some very heavy
duty work of its own in the background.
--
Nick <mailto:tanstaafl@pobox.com>
"There is no one true way." M.L.