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jaathan

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Sep 3, 2007
17
0
Planning to max out the RAM on my white intel iMac because its a bit sluggish but would you notice a speed boost from 1GB to 3GB of RAM?

Thanks
Nathan C.
 
Only if you need more RAM ...

The RAM will stay at (5300/6400 MB/sec) versus the times when you don't have enough an have to wait for something on the HD at (50-75 MB/sec).

Matching RAM, dual channel, latency, etc. aren't as big a boost as putting in enough memory to reduce the pageouts to a manageable level.
 
Thanks for the reply, i dont get the beach ball very often but its usually the minor hiccups/slowdowns in expose and dashboard. I'm planning on getting more RAM because its common for my iStat Pro to show like Free: 13 MB :confused: thats when everything begins slows down.
 
Thanks for the reply, i dont get the beach ball very often but its usually the minor hiccups/slowdowns in expose and dashboard. I'm planning on getting more RAM because its common for my iStat Pro to show like Free: 13 MB :confused: thats when everything begins slows down.

The memory usage of OS X is setup to cache recently used files in memory, so you can show a lot of memory usage that consists of unused cached memory.

After you start a Mac you will see memory usage climb even when apps are closed. The system will free memory from the cache for active use as needed.

Keep a closer eye on "Swap used" under system memory of the Activity Monitor. That will give you an indication if you are running short of real memory and the system is using the HDD to page VM. I have 4GB in my system and leave it on 24/7. My "Swap used" as of today is 19.7MB. My iMac is used to record movies from EyeTV, convert them to MP4, Movie editing via FCE and runs both Windows XP and Vista in Fusion. The fact that it is on all the time means that the "Swap used" is not reset for weeks, so at some point I forced the iMac to use up most of its 4Gb and resort to page swapping VM. Probably when I installed and ran Vista the other day in Fusion.

I checked my wifes Mac Mini for "Swap used". It's only got 2Gb RAM, but she uses it pretty much only to check email and surf the web. Its also on all the time. She had a Swap Used of zero.
 
If you're using parallels, you need the full 3 gigs. At least, that's my experience on my jayleno imac.

I agree. If you are using Parallels or Fusion to run windows you will want to have no less then 3GB. You can run it with 2GB, but it really does bog things down.
 
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