Re: How much memory?
- From: "orc" <not@xxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 30 Dec 2007 16:43:57 GMT
Thanks Shenan,
You've hit the nail on the head
I don't want to spend money on memory if it's not going to be used.
And the question was how could I tell.
I will try out Bill's utility and see what the results are.
Cheers for your help and quick response
Orc
"Shenan Stanley" <newshelper@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:OuzB8TvSIHA.5288@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
orc wrote:
I have a pc with an XP PC with 1GB of memory and occasionally run
processor hungry video editing software.
Is there any easy way to tell if increasing the physical memory
would improve the performance? I.e looking at how much paged memory
is used while processing a large file?
Well - the easiest solution - buy more memory.
http://www.crucial.com/
(Use the advisor.)
Knowing that in general - while you can have unused memory - the
$35-$100(U.S.) will help ensure you don't have too little.
Other than that - figure out (without running the video editor right now)
what applications in Process Explorer or something similar are using the
most memory and see which ones you can do without and find a way of
shutting them down before you start processing video.
As far as a more scientific method, I will quote Ron Martell:
Adding more memory can noticeably improve performance only if the
added memory results in reduced usage of the virtual memory paging
file. Therefore if the paging file is not currently being used to any
significant extent then adding more memory will not provide a
significant improvement.
Unfortunately there is no ready way of determing actual paging file
usage provided with Windows XP - it does not have an equivalent to the
'Memory Manager - Swap File In Use" reporting provided by the System
Monitor utility in Windows 95/98/Me.
There is a free utility that you can download and run which will
provide this information for you. It was written by MVP Bill James and
you can get if from
http://www.dougknox.com/xp/utils/xp_pagefilemon.htm or from
http://billsway.com/notes_public/WinXP_Tweaks/
If that utility shows actual page file usage of 50 mb or more on a
regular basis then that is indicative of fairly significant paging
file activity. Adding more RAM will reduce or even eliminate entirely
this activity thereby improving performance.
This apples regardless of how much or how little RAM is currently
installed in the computer, at least up to the 4 gb RAM maximum for
Windows XP.
--
Shenan Stanley
MS-MVP
--
How To Ask Questions The Smart Way
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
.
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