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mikemarrs wrote:the reason i ask this is because i'll sit while my screen freezes up for a minute or two sometimes.already checked and no viruses.
mikemarrs wrote:the reason i ask this is because i'll sit while my screen freezes up for a minute or two sometimes.already checked and no viruses.
Ehwmatt wrote:The single biggest thing you can do to increase performance is to upgrade your RAM to maximum capacity. Don't chintz on it, get good RAM (not cheap RAM).
Go to www.crucial.com . They have a good selection and a Web App that will detect the optimal RAM for your computer, as well as how much it can accept.
mikemarrs wrote:the reason i ask this is because i'll sit while my screen freezes up for a minute or two sometimes.already checked and no viruses.
Rick wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:The single biggest thing you can do to increase performance is to upgrade your RAM to maximum capacity. Don't chintz on it, get good RAM (not cheap RAM).
Go to www.crucial.com . They have a good selection and a Web App that will detect the optimal RAM for your computer, as well as how much it can accept.
Nice find!
Rick wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:The single biggest thing you can do to increase performance is to upgrade your RAM to maximum capacity. Don't chintz on it, get good RAM (not cheap RAM).
Go to www.crucial.com . They have a good selection and a Web App that will detect the optimal RAM for your computer, as well as how much it can accept.
Nice find!
mikemarrs wrote:CPU shows between 2 and 4 percent.memory says 338 MB,total physical memory 444,cached 142,free 3.the physical memory is 80 percent..windows vista 160 GB hard drive,512 MB DDR2...i have an emachine T5082 desktop
Duncan wrote:Rick wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:The single biggest thing you can do to increase performance is to upgrade your RAM to maximum capacity. Don't chintz on it, get good RAM (not cheap RAM).
Go to www.crucial.com . They have a good selection and a Web App that will detect the optimal RAM for your computer, as well as how much it can accept.
Nice find!
I have just run the app and it tells me I have 4 memory slots each with a 1GB memory card in each slot. It recommends changing these to 2GB cards giving a total of 8GB RAM. However, I have 32 BIT Windows Vista, which I understand can only recognise 3.5GB of RAM. So am I correct in thinking an upgrade is pointless?
Thanks
Rick wrote:Duncan wrote:Rick wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:The single biggest thing you can do to increase performance is to upgrade your RAM to maximum capacity. Don't chintz on it, get good RAM (not cheap RAM).
Go to www.crucial.com . They have a good selection and a Web App that will detect the optimal RAM for your computer, as well as how much it can accept.
Nice find!
I have just run the app and it tells me I have 4 memory slots each with a 1GB memory card in each slot. It recommends changing these to 2GB cards giving a total of 8GB RAM. However, I have 32 BIT Windows Vista, which I understand can only recognise 3.5GB of RAM. So am I correct in thinking an upgrade is pointless?
Thanks
Yes, unless you upgrade to the 64bit operating system. The 32 bit OS will recognize 4GB total memory. Which includes video memory, cache and all that added up, so your RAM may be as little as 3 or as much as 3.5, depending on what all the other memory adds up to, subtracting from the overall whole of 4GB. The 64 bit operating system can handle up to 128GB, I think.
Rick wrote:mikemarrs wrote:CPU shows between 2 and 4 percent.memory says 338 MB,total physical memory 444,cached 142,free 3.the physical memory is 80 percent..windows vista 160 GB hard drive,512 MB DDR2...i have an emachine T5082 desktop
Hey Mike, you can max that thing out on RAM and make it run much better. It maxes out at 2GB, which is 4 times the RAM you have now. The RAM sticks are $19.99 a piece at the link Matt supplied. Actually, here it is. http://www.crucial.com/store/listparts.aspx?model=T5082
I'm not sure if you're in a position to buy it or not, but it will most certainly give you a marked improvement in performance. You have a Pentium 4 with Hyperthreading, so that's like having a dual core. If it were me, I would max out the RAM and keep it another few years.
mikemarrs wrote:CPU shows between 2 and 4 percent.memory says 338 MB,total physical memory 444,cached 142,free 3.the physical memory is 80 percent..windows vista 160 GB hard drive,512 MB DDR2...i have an emachine T5082 desktop
Fact Finder wrote:Also if it's surfing speed, check your ..Tools..Internet Options... and choose...settings... then maybe UP the amount of Disc space to use for Temp Int Files...you will definitly NEED to do this after the RAM upgrade anyways.
Dump your temp int files often, at least weekly or more if a lot of surfing gets done on that machine.
HTH's
parfait wrote:Behshad wrote:Get a Mac !
Yeah, listen to the grown man with 12 year olds dancing half naked in his signature.
Mac is gay.
Behshad wrote:I was anti Mac and living in the dark just like you. But the last two years I have enjoyed my iMac without ANY slowdowns , crashes , viruses or blue screen. Bring on some valid points as why you think Mac " is gay" ... Lets see what you got Mr Uringotang![]()
conversationpc wrote:Behshad wrote:I was anti Mac and living in the dark just like you. But the last two years I have enjoyed my iMac without ANY slowdowns , crashes , viruses or blue screen. Bring on some valid points as why you think Mac " is gay" ... Lets see what you got Mr Uringotang![]()
I've had my laptop with Windows XP for over three years now and it's crashed maybe once the entire time I've had it and that was my fault. As long as you know what the hell you're doing with a computer, unless the hardware is bad, you really can't go wrong with either a Windows OR Mac machine.
Behshad wrote:Not true. No matter how "careful" you are with your pc , you still get the slowdowns. You still get programs running in the background you have to force kill. And you still can get the blue screen.
I am still using a pc as I've used them since 1990, but lately I prefer Mac.Besides my whole point was that SirPeesAlot doesn't know squat about Mac or PC !
Behshad wrote:conversationpc wrote:Behshad wrote:I was anti Mac and living in the dark just like you. But the last two years I have enjoyed my iMac without ANY slowdowns , crashes , viruses or blue screen. Bring on some valid points as why you think Mac " is gay" ... Lets see what you got Mr Uringotang![]()
I've had my laptop with Windows XP for over three years now and it's crashed maybe once the entire time I've had it and that was my fault. As long as you know what the hell you're doing with a computer, unless the hardware is bad, you really can't go wrong with either a Windows OR Mac machine.
Not true. No matter how "careful" you are with your pc , you still get the slowdowns. You still get programs running in the background you have to force kill. And you still can get the blue screen.
I am still using a pc as I've used them since 1990, but lately I prefer Mac.Besides my whole point was that SirPeesAlot doesn't know squat about Mac or PC !
conversationpc wrote:Behshad wrote:Not true. No matter how "careful" you are with your pc , you still get the slowdowns. You still get programs running in the background you have to force kill. And you still can get the blue screen.
I am still using a pc as I've used them since 1990, but lately I prefer Mac.Besides my whole point was that SirPeesAlot doesn't know squat about Mac or PC !
Happens on Macs, too, the slowdowns anyway. As for programs running in the background, I'm not so sure that's a Microsoft fault as it is the fault of piss-poor software developers.
Behshad wrote:It is Microsofts fault. With Apple , no programs run in the background. The OS terminates the program upon exit and doesn't just allow any programs to go into the startup registry and start in the background As soon as you start up the OS.
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