How much RAM is used is directly related to what you have running at any point in time. It will vary widely as your workload varies, no matter which version of Mac OS X you're running.Does Mountain Lion use less RAM?
anyone know? i'm struggling with 5GB on Lion.
thanks
Mac OS X will use whatever RAM is available. That doesn't mean you would have page outs with less RAM. Free memory is wasted memory.I dunno, I have 16gb of ram and in total it was using up 12+gb last night and all I was doing was surfing the web
granted, i have some background apps running like hiss and bowtie, but come on, 8 was in active use
It doesn't matter how much RAM is used. Mac OS X will use all available memory. Free and inactive memory are both available to any app that needs additional memory. The only thing to watch for is page outs.Just one day after a restart. A few apps open, and it has eaten almost 6 GB RAM. For me, it is same as Lion. And yes, 1.2 GB is inactive
Although I have observed wired memory after boot is significantly lower (600-700 MB) compared to Lion (900 - 1 GB).
Mac OS X will use whatever RAM is available. That doesn't mean you would have page outs with less RAM. Free memory is wasted memory.
Apps don't "reserve" memory. Apps simply send requests to Mac OS X, which manages all memory usage.This argument has never made sense to me. If the program has reserved some "extra" memory and is actively using it, then it's bloated. If it has reserved some "extra" memory just in case, then it may be preventing another program from using it. Memory should be reserved when it is needed. It's not like it takes much longer to do that then if it had pre-reserved it.