Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.general,microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware (
More info?)
Re. installed apps, one assumes that if somebody installs apps, they also
use them..
If one had 64mb installed and needed to add extra memory, the smallest
capacity memory module of the type most frequently to be found is 64mb, so
one would end up with 128mb, and not 70mb as you suggested.. above the
stated minimum on the XP box, eh.. add to that the fact that IE in its
original form needed 32mb for its own use, and later versions required 64mb,
the memory requirement rises quite dramatically.. you have to ask yourself
why it is that pc suppliers still set the base RAM levels so low.. but then
they always did only supply enough memory to allow Windows operation at
initial start up on their low to medium offerings..
Maybe MS might consider changing the running specs on the side of the box
too.. 256mb should be considered the minimum RAM requirement.. I should have
qualified what I said, but forgot that the minimum suggested on the box is a
joke..
I don't think that XP is much use running in less than 512mb, but I did read
the info in my original post somewhere recently.. I just don't remember
where.. I also question whether 8mb is enough to run a major application,
bearing in mind what MS Word 2003 can do compared to MS Word 2.. if I find
the page again, I will suggest that it is updated.. I thought about it at
the time, but was sidetracked..
Stay safe.. Mike H
"Ken Blake" <kblake@this.is.an.invalid.domain> wrote in message
news:e%23lGS4XgEHA.3948@TK2MSFTNGP11.phx.gbl...
> In news:t_9Tc.25773$a65.1092451@news20.bellglobal.com,
> Mike H <mike.hall.mail@sympatico.ca> typed:
>
> > You should have whatever is the minimum that XP will operate in
> > PLUS
> > at least 8mb for each major application installed..
>
>
> Sorry, that's not at all correct.
>
> Rules of thumb like that are almost invariably wrong. What you
> say implies that if you had Windows XP and the only installed app
> was Microsoft Word 2003, 72MB would be enough. That is
> emphatically *not* true. Install ten such apps, bringing you to
> 144MB, and it's still very far from true.
>
> What apps you have installed hardly matters at all. What's
> significant is what apps you run, and how large are the files you
> open with them.
>
> How much RAM you need to run an application depends on what the
> application is. They are far from being all the same.
>
> And finally 8MB for any major app is *far* too little.
>
> --
> Ken Blake - Microsoft MVP Windows: Shell/User
> Please reply to the newsgroup
>
>
> >
> >
> > "Ken Blake" <kblake@this.is.an.invalid.domain> wrote in message
> > news:uGzLuZXgEHA.1656@TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
> >> In news:5a4101c48173$c3d07fe0$a301280a@phx.gbl,
> >> BABU <anonymous@discussions.microsoft.com> typed:
> >>
> >> > I'm having a 3yrs old PC with 64mb of system RAM(SD).Now I
> >> > want to increase the RAM,so I bought another 128mb of RAM
> >> > (SD) which I want to add to the previous one so that my
> >> > total system memory becomes 64+128=192mb. But I'm afraid
> >> > if the frequencies(66MHz or 100MHz) of both the RAMs dont
> >> > match, what will be the result??? In such a case, how does
> >> > one understand that the RAMs frequencies are not
> >> > mathcing??? How to detect the frequencies of the
> >> > individual RAMs???
> >>
> >>
> >> Despite what many people think, these numbers are not actually
> >> the speed of the RAM, but their speed *rating*. It's the
> >> fastest
> >> speed the RAM has been tested and certified to work at. The
> >> actual running speed is set by the motherboard, not by the
> >> RAM.
> >>
> >> So as a general rule, it doesn't hurt to add faster RAM to a
> >> computer with slower RAM. The newer RAM will continue to run
> >> at
> >> the motherboard speed (the speed of the slower RAM) and will
> >> be
> >> running well within its limits.
> >>
> >> However adding slower RAM will likely cause a problem, since
> >> the
> >> newer RAM will be forced to run at the higher speed, and may
> >> fail
> >> at that speed.
> >>
> >> Over and above all this is the fact that Windows XP is very
> >> picky
> >> about RAM, and often fails if the RAM is not matched exactly.
> >>
> >> One final point, 64MB, as I'm sure you realize if you've been
> >> using it, is grossly inadequate to run Windows XP, despite its
> >> being the official minimum. Going to 192MB will definitely
> >> help,
> >> but my normal recommendation is that everyone should have at
> >> least 256MB (perhaps more, depending on what apps you run).
> >> Since
> >> your RAM seems to be mismatched and problems are likely, it
> >> might
> >> be worth your while to buy another 128MB stick exactly like
> >> the
> >> other one (same brand, specs, etc.) and replace the 64MB stick
> >> with it.
> >>
> >> --
> >> Ken Blake - Microsoft MVP Windows: Shell/User
> >> Please reply to the newsgroup
>
>