On Fri, 23 Jan 2009 10:19:01 -0800, Mark
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
> Hello there,
>
> A friend at work mentioned that in Vista it is possible to use a memory
> stick plugged into a USB port to act as extra memory (RAM). Though he
> believes this is not available in XP as standard he thought there is a
> download to facilitate this. I'm using XP Home. If this is the case can
> anyone point me in the right direction?
It's called ReadyBoost. Your friend either doesn't understand what
ReadyBoost is or he's misleading you. ReadyBoost does not simply work
as extra RAM. For information on what it is, read
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ReadyBoost
ReadyBoost is available in Vista, but not XP, and if there's any way
to do something similar in XP, I don't know of it.
But it doesn't much matter, because ReadyBoost is a poor idea for
almost everyone. The following is my standard message (for Vista
users) on ReadyBoost:
My advice is not to use ReadyBoost no matter how much RAM you have.
If you have 2GB or more of RAM, the little it might do for you is so
slight as to be almost unnoticeable.
And if you have less than 2GB of RAM, you would do much better to
spend your money on upgrading your RAM to 2GB than on buying a device
for ReadyBoost use.
So, in general, I always recommend against using ReadyBoost.
--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience
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