How do I check RAM and Video Cards?
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How do I check RAM and Video Cards?
I know it sounds like a big newb question, but I never really looked into it. How can I check how much RAM my computer has and how much exactly is the maximum for most computers. Mine is a Windows XP. I am a newb at all this high tech terminolgy and stuff. Please help.
- Kariudo
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right click on "my computer" and click properties
the maximum amount of memory depends on your motherboard and your OS
winXP (32-bit) can only address up to 4GB of ram before it has to do special stuff
it also depends on how many ram slots your motherboard has, as well as the maximum memory each slot can support (2 slots with 1GB max per slot = 2GB max total)
if I had to guess, I'd say that your max is probably 4GB (4 slots with 1GB max/slot)
the maximum amount of memory depends on your motherboard and your OS
winXP (32-bit) can only address up to 4GB of ram before it has to do special stuff
it also depends on how many ram slots your motherboard has, as well as the maximum memory each slot can support (2 slots with 1GB max per slot = 2GB max total)
if I had to guess, I'd say that your max is probably 4GB (4 slots with 1GB max/slot)
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- Kariudo
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pre-built and public computers would typically probably range from 256MB to 1GB
typical users probably won't use more than 1GB
higher-end pre-built systems could get up to 2GB, I don't think I've seen any with 4GB
for editing, that absolute minimum I'd try editing with is 512MB
2GB is probably the sugar spot between price and added performance
I'm sure there's more than enough people maxing out with 4GB
I personally use 3GB (only 2.75GB is usable for some reason)
you can always find a way to use all of your memory, but I don't think I've used more than 2.5GB (multiple files open in AvsP, premiere pro, AIM 6, vdubmod)
typical users probably won't use more than 1GB
higher-end pre-built systems could get up to 2GB, I don't think I've seen any with 4GB
for editing, that absolute minimum I'd try editing with is 512MB
2GB is probably the sugar spot between price and added performance
I'm sure there's more than enough people maxing out with 4GB
I personally use 3GB (only 2.75GB is usable for some reason)
you can always find a way to use all of your memory, but I don't think I've used more than 2.5GB (multiple files open in AvsP, premiere pro, AIM 6, vdubmod)
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That might be due to how 32-bit Windows uses memory. See my post in this thread for details.Kariudo wrote:I personally use 3GB (only 2.75GB is usable for some reason)
Also, if you are using an on-board video graphics chip rather than a discrete graphics card, it's possible that the memory discrepancy is due to some of RAM being allocated for video.
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It seems like it's your hardware (BIOS) that is assigning the RAM for your PCI and PCI-E/AGP cards taking the memory chunk out of that specific address space. Newer hardware should be able to access memory mapped at higher address spaces leaving more physical RAM available to the OS or applications.
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Oh, and 2 other ways of finding your computer system's info:
System Information: found in Start > Accessories > System Tools > System Information. Expand the Components category and select Display to find out what video card/chip you have and how much RAM it has or is using.
DirectX Diagnostic Tool: go to Start > Run... and type dxdiag to bring it up.
System Information: found in Start > Accessories > System Tools > System Information. Expand the Components category and select Display to find out what video card/chip you have and how much RAM it has or is using.
DirectX Diagnostic Tool: go to Start > Run... and type dxdiag to bring it up.