Warning

 

Close
Confirm Action

Are you sure you wish to do this?

Cancel Confirm
AR15.COM
3/29/2003 4:37:06 PM EDT
I got a new laptop today.
It has 512 megs of ram.
I'm going to use it for some spread sheets,esitmates,couple of simple games and internet.
Is there really a noticeable improvement if I'm not going to run something like autocad on it?

3/29/2003 4:42:11 PM EDT
[#1]
... Go for it, especially if you're plan on using any of the higher in graphics software.
You won't regret it with AutoCAD. Not needed for Excel alone.
3/29/2003 4:43:31 PM EDT
[#2]
If your laptop and OS (WinXP? it does) supports it, go for it. It can't hurt ;)
3/29/2003 4:45:18 PM EDT
[#3]
RAM is good. RAM is cheap.
3/29/2003 4:47:23 PM EDT
[#4]
Man, I wish my laptop would go to 1024.
It's maxed out at 512 already. [:(]


CHRIS
3/29/2003 4:47:23 PM EDT
[#5]
You only have too much RAM when...uh...well...ok, get the RAM..hehe

For most purposes, 512MB should be fine, even with memory-hungry Win2k or WinXP.  Those OS's are generally starving on a 128MB system and marginal on a 256MB system when a couple of apps are open.  With 512MB, the OS should have enough elbow room until you have a good half-dozen to a dozen apps open (different apps, not just different windows of the same app...depending heavily on how the app was written, some are poorly written).

In theory, there is a downside to the extra memory (minus the cost).  That is on a notebook computer, it does take a tiny bit more electricity to power the RAM chips, so it could run your battery down a tiny bit faster.  However in practice, the leading theory I've heard is that when you have a ton of RAM on a notebook, the computer is far less apt to access the hard drive for normal Windows operations and thereby save battery power by not going to the battery-hungry drive as much.

Speed difference?  No, not really. In a year or two it'll probably make a difference as new software is released, but not this year.

If it was me?  Yeah, I'd definitely go for the extra memory!