Re: Installing Extra RAM

Tech-Archive recommends: Repair Windows Errors & Optimize Windows Performance



Your opinion is no more or less valid than mine, I really don't care who
agrees or doesn't agree, continue to give your advise and I will continue to
give mine.

--
----
Crosspost, do not multipost http://www.blakjak.demon.co.uk/mul_crss.htm
How to ask a question http://support.microsoft.com/kb/555375
How to Post http://www.dts-l.org/goodpost.htm
_________________________________________________________________________________

"Gerry" <gerry@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:%23gENCfsNIHA.4196@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
David

Not correct as you said it. Your rephrasing at least makes your meaning
clearer. Having said that you are still not undertanding that "that's why
you need to change the setting to system managed." is only your opinion
that others are not obliged to share. Nobody's having a hard time, other
than you as far as I can see.

--



Hope this helps.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

David B. wrote:
Of course I said it, and it is correct, if you upgrade RAM, and have a
default XP installation, the swap file will remain set at the size it
was set at before you upgraded the RAM, that's why you need to change
the setting to system managed. I don't see why people are having such
a hard time here.


"Gerry" <gerry@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:%23oGeFUrNIHA.4272@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Not really David.

Did you or did you not say this ""Except for the swapfile, it will
be set for the pre upgrade amount of RAM as I said in my post."?.

Perhaps it was another David B?


--



Hope this helps.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

David B. wrote:
You have misunderstood. If you have a PC with Windows XP, and 256 MB
of RAM, if you upgrade the RAM to 512MB or 1GB, Windows WILL NOT
automatically adjust the swap file to match the upgrade, the page
file setting will remain unchanged after the upgrade, you need to
either manually adjust the size for the additional RAM or take the
easier route and set it to system managed, I will stress this
because there seems to be some confusion.
WINDOWS XP'S PAGE FILE IS NOT SET TO SYSTEM MANAGED BY DEFAULT, IT
WILL NOT AUTOMATICALLY CHANGE THE SWAP FILE SIZE WHEN ADDING OR
REMOVING RAM FROM THE SYSTEM.

You people are on here arguing with me about exactly what I said, it
SHOULD be set to system managed, but it is not be default, Windows
Vista is.

"Gerry" <gerry@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:OgeOtnqNIHA.4948@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Daave

"Except for the swapfile, it will be set for the pre upgrade amount
of RAM as I said in my post.".

This is the statement which provoked Leonard's first post. In my
view the statement by David B is wrong but you can argue that his
meaning is not clear.

The question by the OP was about installing extra RAM and "am I
required to change any settings". The answer is no because the new
RAM is automatically registered by the system. David B introduced
the subject of the pagefile but making changes to pagefile settings
is not required as he implied. You can if you want make changes, it
is an option the user may wish to do. David B's statement is wrong
regarding the pagefile as it makes an assumption about the users
settings which the OP has not revealed.

Leonard is an adherent to the school of thought that letting
Windows manage the page file is best. He seems to have made one
mistake when he said that this the default. When it was pointed
out that he was wrong he backed off asking for a truce. Look again
"Leonard kept on insisting that by default" is an exageration. The
whole exchange was pointless because neither knew what pagefile
settings the OP had. --
Regards.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Daave wrote:
"Gerry" <gerry@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:e7wigLoNIHA.6108@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
David

That's not the debate you were having with Leonard as it looked
to me.

It looked that way to me.

Leonard kept on insisting that by default, XP lets the system
manage virtual memory, which is not true. If XP did indeed do
this, then David B.'s customers would never have gotten the low
virtual memory errors after they increased their amount of RAM.




.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Installing Extra RAM
    ... be set for the pre upgrade amount of RAM as I said in my post."?. ... Perhaps it was another David B? ... required to change any settings". ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.perform_maintain)
  • Re: Installing Extra RAM
    ... Hudster, David B., Leonard, and you are talking about different, yet ... If the system recognizes the new RAM ... and forget it") and instead has its original default settings, ... Then later, Leonard challenged him. ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.perform_maintain)
  • Re: Installing Extra RAM
    ... Hudster, David B., Leonard, and you are talking about different, yet ... the extra RAM he planned on installing. ... possible that those settings may eventually lead to error messages. ... Then later, Leonard challenged him. ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.perform_maintain)
  • Re: Installing Extra RAM
    ... Of course I said it, and it is correct, if you upgrade RAM, and have a default XP installation, the swap file will remain set at the size it was set at before you upgraded the RAM, that's why you need to change the setting to system managed. ... Perhaps it was another David B? ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.perform_maintain)
  • Re: Installing Extra RAM
    ... Perhaps it was another David B? ... of RAM, if you upgrade the RAM to 512MB or 1GB, Windows WILL NOT ... required to change any settings". ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.perform_maintain)