PC Review


Reply
Thread Tools Rate Thread

this 4gb ram question is very annoying....

 
 
NewFox
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      19th Dec 2006
I have seen this question swim arround the newsgroups for more than a year..
ever since ram has become cheap...

they say that 4 gb is not seen by the os..they go on an endless blaber about
how the
extra memory is used by the system...

So at 3 gb no memory is used.. and at 4 gb suddenly the hardware says..
time to eat up some ram! lol

Ok so this is the question:

You have 3 gb.. and the os sees 3 gb... everything is fine..
you stick another 1 gb inside to reach 4 gb (the os still reports 3 gb)

What happens? Do you see any improvment at all or did you just waste
the money for the 1 extra gb?

In other words performance of a 3 and 4 gigabyte system is exactly
identical?

According to what I have understood the memoryt addresses are used, so even
if you have 4 gigs it cannot see or use it.. its worthless of getting 4 gb..
you might as well get only 3





 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
Tim Draper
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      19th Dec 2006
imo, yes it is a waste having 4gb on a 32bit OS.
i didnt see ANY improvements at all in day-to-day use, or in benchmarks.

HOWEVER take a look at
http://www.bcchardware.com/index.php...1&limitstart=3
pictures speak a thousand words.

on 32bit OS: no, 4gb is not worth it since you loose 1gb+ to system
resources, and i personally have not seen any increase in performance
visually or in benchmarks
64bit OS: yes, if your considering 4gb, then it is worth it.

vista runs so damn sweet on my system.
AMD Opteron 146 @ 2.7ghz
4x 1gb PC3200 ram ('generic' Elixir ram) @ 240fsb, 2.5-3-3-8-2T
DFI SLI-DR mobo
X-Fi
7800GTX SLI.

however, creative (and i think hauppauge too) have issues with 4gb
currently. creative crackles randomly. one day it can be fine all day,
othertimes you could need to restart to 'cure' the problem every
1-2hours. sounds just like a bad connection, but it's a known issue with
4gb ram thats been around since XP64. restart solves it.
my hauppauge USB-PVR2 BSODs on vista 32bit - this COULD be due to the
system resource allocation when using 4gb. since there are no 64bit
drivers for the USB-PVR2 as of yet, i cant comment any further.

tim

NewFox wrote:
> I have seen this question swim arround the newsgroups for more than a year..
> ever since ram has become cheap...
>
> they say that 4 gb is not seen by the os..they go on an endless blaber about
> how the
> extra memory is used by the system...
>
> So at 3 gb no memory is used.. and at 4 gb suddenly the hardware says..
> time to eat up some ram! lol
>
> Ok so this is the question:
>
> You have 3 gb.. and the os sees 3 gb... everything is fine..
> you stick another 1 gb inside to reach 4 gb (the os still reports 3 gb)
>
> What happens? Do you see any improvment at all or did you just waste
> the money for the 1 extra gb?
>
> In other words performance of a 3 and 4 gigabyte system is exactly
> identical?
>
> According to what I have understood the memoryt addresses are used, so even
> if you have 4 gigs it cannot see or use it.. its worthless of getting 4 gb..
> you might as well get only 3
>
>
>
>
>

 
Reply With Quote
 
Tom Lake
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      19th Dec 2006
> According to what I have understood the memoryt addresses are used, so even
> if you have 4 gigs it cannot see or use it.. its worthless of getting 4 gb..
> you might as well get only 3


With a 32-bit OS, you're correct unless you have dual-channel RAM.
Then your RAM will run slower with three SIMMs instead of 4.
Of course with a 64-bit OS, you'll use all 4GB directly so if there's
ever a possibility you might upgrade the OS later, get the 4GB.

Tom Lake



 
Reply With Quote
 
Oenone
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      19th Dec 2006
Tom Lake wrote:
> With a 32-bit OS, you're correct unless you have dual-channel RAM.
> Then your RAM will run slower with three SIMMs instead of 4.


You don't necessarily have three DIMMs in order to have 3GB -- I have 3GB in
my system, consisting of a pair of 1GB DIMMs and a pair of 0.5GB DIMMs.

Anyway, with this configuration, both XP and Vista (both 32-bit) report my
total system ram as 2.75GB (the BIOS correctly reports 3GB). I've never
managed to get either OS to see even the full 3GB.

--

(O)enone


 
Reply With Quote
 
VicTek
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      19th Dec 2006

"Tim Draper" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news(E-Mail Removed)...
> imo, yes it is a waste having 4gb on a 32bit OS.
> i didnt see ANY improvements at all in day-to-day use, or in benchmarks.
>
> HOWEVER take a look at
> http://www.bcchardware.com/index.php...1&limitstart=3
> pictures speak a thousand words.
>
> on 32bit OS: no, 4gb is not worth it since you loose 1gb+ to system
> resources, and i personally have not seen any increase in performance
> visually or in benchmarks
> 64bit OS: yes, if your considering 4gb, then it is worth it.
>


The fact that frame-rates in games increase with more ram is a pretty good
case for adding ram. However, the performance test compared 2 gigs to 4
gigs. I'd like to see some tests comparing 3gigs to 4gigs. Even though the
extra gig is not available to applications if the OS is using it then that
should leave more of the available 3gigs for the applications, yes? Is
there some way to measure this?

Regarding not seeing any improvement in day to day use, that would depend on
how heavily you load the system. I think you need to use games, Photoshop
editing large files, etc. to see the difference. I run XP with 1 gig and
the only time I see significant paging is when I process large numbers of
digital photos.


 
Reply With Quote
 
Colin Barnhorst
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      19th Dec 2006
The OS uses address space at the upper end of 4GB for reserved system space.
It doesn't matter whether or not you actually have those addresses as
physical ram. If you have less than 4GB the memory manager will do address
translation to physical ram as needed. If you have 4GB of physical ram the
memory manager does not need the translation but now has to fence off the
system space to prevent user programs from attempting to write there. The
BIOS also reserves some addresses in the same way for various devices. Even
though you see less than 4GB with 4GB installed, the OS is defintely using
all 4GB. This is not peculiar to Windows. I first saw it when I upgraded
an Atari 800 to max supported memory.

"NewFox" <-> wrote in message
news:%(E-Mail Removed)...
>I have seen this question swim arround the newsgroups for more than a
>year..
> ever since ram has become cheap...
>
> they say that 4 gb is not seen by the os..they go on an endless blaber
> about how the
> extra memory is used by the system...
>
> So at 3 gb no memory is used.. and at 4 gb suddenly the hardware says..
> time to eat up some ram! lol
>
> Ok so this is the question:
>
> You have 3 gb.. and the os sees 3 gb... everything is fine..
> you stick another 1 gb inside to reach 4 gb (the os still reports 3 gb)
>
> What happens? Do you see any improvment at all or did you just waste
> the money for the 1 extra gb?
>
> In other words performance of a 3 and 4 gigabyte system is exactly
> identical?
>
> According to what I have understood the memoryt addresses are used, so
> even if you have 4 gigs it cannot see or use it.. its worthless of getting
> 4 gb.. you might as well get only 3
>
>
>
>
>


 
Reply With Quote
 
Colin Barnhorst
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      19th Dec 2006
Another way to understand this is that the ram you see on the properties
page is the amount available to user programs. It is not neccessarily a
report on how much physical ram is actually on the box.

"Colin Barnhorst" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
> The OS uses address space at the upper end of 4GB for reserved system
> space. It doesn't matter whether or not you actually have those addresses
> as physical ram. If you have less than 4GB the memory manager will do
> address translation to physical ram as needed. If you have 4GB of
> physical ram the memory manager does not need the translation but now has
> to fence off the system space to prevent user programs from attempting to
> write there. The BIOS also reserves some addresses in the same way for
> various devices. Even though you see less than 4GB with 4GB installed,
> the OS is defintely using all 4GB. This is not peculiar to Windows. I
> first saw it when I upgraded an Atari 800 to max supported memory.
>
>


 
Reply With Quote
 
NewFox
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      19th Dec 2006
I dont think that is correct!.. something is wrong.. because on 64 bit it
can see 128 ish...GB's

I have seen that when a ram stick is not inserted tightly it may not be
registering...
I have to open the box and push em in for them to work correctly...

perhaps this is the case with one of your sticks?

what does the bios say?

How about a free diagnostic tool like the free CPU-Z what ram chips does it
find?
http://www.cpuid.com/cpuz.php

"Steve" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:2DDB59DA-B5E0-4A4E-84F4-(E-Mail Removed)...
>I have 4 1GB sticks running x64 xp pro and it only reports 2.75 GB, explain
> this please.
> --
> Steve
> (x64man)
>
>
> "Tom Lake" wrote:
>
>> > According to what I have understood the memoryt addresses are used, so
>> > even
>> > if you have 4 gigs it cannot see or use it.. its worthless of getting 4
>> > gb..
>> > you might as well get only 3

>>
>> With a 32-bit OS, you're correct unless you have dual-channel RAM.
>> Then your RAM will run slower with three SIMMs instead of 4.
>> Of course with a 64-bit OS, you'll use all 4GB directly so if there's
>> ever a possibility you might upgrade the OS later, get the 4GB.
>>
>> Tom Lake
>>
>>
>>



 
Reply With Quote
 
NewFox
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      19th Dec 2006
I want to get to the core of the matter. That was the problem with all the
posts regaurding this 4 gb thing.. people talked and talked and got
nowhere..

So here is the question, can you answer in a simple clear manner?

Ok, so if you have a 3 gb machine and a 4 gb machine that reports 3 gb,
you are saying that indeed there is a difference in performance?

Yes or No?


If you say yes, I doubt it.. but I am open if you can convince me... lol


"Colin Barnhorst" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:CD13CACA-D6FE-4572-8122-(E-Mail Removed)...
> Another way to understand this is that the ram you see on the properties
> page is the amount available to user programs. It is not neccessarily a
> report on how much physical ram is actually on the box.
>
> "Colin Barnhorst" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>> The OS uses address space at the upper end of 4GB for reserved system
>> space. It doesn't matter whether or not you actually have those addresses
>> as physical ram. If you have less than 4GB the memory manager will do
>> address translation to physical ram as needed. If you have 4GB of
>> physical ram the memory manager does not need the translation but now has
>> to fence off the system space to prevent user programs from attempting to
>> write there. The BIOS also reserves some addresses in the same way for
>> various devices. Even though you see less than 4GB with 4GB installed,
>> the OS is defintely using all 4GB. This is not peculiar to Windows. I
>> first saw it when I upgraded an Atari 800 to max supported memory.
>>
>>

>



 
Reply With Quote
 
Colin Barnhorst
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      19th Dec 2006
Yes. You would not see much unless you are running very memory demanding
programs, then the more ram the better, but there is a slight perf gain just
by the memory manager not having to do address translation for the upper
range of memory addresses that are used by the system (it can just address
directly).

"NewFox" <-> wrote in message news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>I want to get to the core of the matter. That was the problem with all the
>posts regaurding this 4 gb thing.. people talked and talked and got
>nowhere..
>
> So here is the question, can you answer in a simple clear manner?
>
> Ok, so if you have a 3 gb machine and a 4 gb machine that reports 3 gb,
> you are saying that indeed there is a difference in performance?
>
> Yes or No?
>
>
> If you say yes, I doubt it.. but I am open if you can convince me... lol
>
>


 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
Reply

Thread Tools
Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Re: Browser Question: Very Annoying Pop up window that happens at Robert Aldwinckle Windows Vista Networking 1 30th Nov 2008 03:27 PM
Disabling that annoying question Ed Microsoft Outlook 3 6th Feb 2008 09:18 PM
annoying question about clipboard keeps popping up =?Utf-8?B?c3lsdmllc2luYw==?= Windows XP Help 4 13th Aug 2006 04:23 PM
Annoying question in OE Nana Windows XP General 7 4th Mar 2005 04:41 AM
Stupid question, annoying problem....help? =?Utf-8?B?R2VtbWE=?= Windows XP MovieMaker 3 13th Jan 2004 06:16 AM


Features
 

Advertising
 

Newsgroups
 


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:02 PM.