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#11
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On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 21:13:43 +0000, °Mike° wrote:
On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 16:07:28 -0500, in pan.2004.02.23.21.07.27.346868@ifyoureallywanttok now.com Bob scrawled: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 20:27:02 +0000, °Mike° wrote: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 15:09:40 -0500, in pan.2004.02.23.20.09.39.494825@ifyoureallywanttok now.com Bob scrawled: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 19:07:28 +0000, °Mike° wrote: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 13:36:35 -0500, in pan.2004.02.23.18.36.34.334307@ifyoureallywanttok now.com Bob scrawled: snip The other thing is that Windows 98 isn't really capable of utilizing 512MB of RAM. Rubbish! :-), you think so? Ever see a Win9X use 512MB RAM? I doubt it. I've got one running 768MB, and I know numerous people who have 1GB in Win98 systems. Doubt it all you want. I don't care how much RAM you have inside the box, Win9X is not using it all, not anything near 512, let alone 256. I see. You know more about my box than I do, then. That figures.... I know what I know about O/S's and hardware. For instance, I have an XP pro machine next to me that's currently running Office 2003 word, outlook, ppoint, publisher, infopath, excel, access, IE, nav corporate edition 7.2 scanning my disk (7200rpm ata133),filezilla ftp downloading an iso image from FreeBSD ftp2 site, real1player,M$ maps and trips, M$ Money and, moviemaker, all open. Also, I'm doing frequency analysis on a 45 minute .wav file in Cooledit Pro. My box is using 252MB RAM, cpu is a 2.4GHz, also the nav scan process is set high priority. This has been running for awhile now, a few minutes at least. Oh, and taskmgr is open as well. My box only has 256MB ram in it. My page file is, of course, going nuts. Now, what difference does it make if I have 512MB in this box,` wouldn't be using it anyway, but I would be paging. Windows extended memory manager does not necessarily work as might think, it will page first depending on address space, application that's using RAM, and a bunch of other factors. Show me your mem stats from this box that shows more than 256 actually IN USE. Your 9X, ME boxes, don't/won't use 512MB ram. Why? You said it yourself; "Win9X is not using it all". Since you are a "Mr. Know-it-all", there's not a lot of point conversing with you, is there? snip No one's a know-it-all in this business, I'm a bored network admin./sys engineer stuck at home with a broken ****ing ankle. Have a Great Day!! ~Bob |
#12
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On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 18:48:51 -0000, "eric_seal"
wrote: snip The difference between 128 M and 512 M is not going to be as noticeable as the difference between 32M and 128M, so dont expect miracles!. Simplifying things, when Win98 runs out of memory, it substitutes hard disk space - which is much slower. So you will be able to run more programs concurrently without the hard disk light looking like a christmas tree light. You will be able to sort larger databases, convert larger graphics images, index larger Word documents, all without the machine turning into a dead slug. Yeah, I feel stupid. Of course, software that scans files is HD intensive. Oops. I'll give the kids a crack at games and see if they no longer crash. Or edit a big photo file. snip Or it could be your new memory is slower.. Probably not. The new memory is Dell memory (same part number and everything) purchased from a third party vendor that wanted 20% less for it than Dell did. snip If you are saying that it takes 10-30 minutes to print all the stuff in the queue ahead of the fifth document, that's life..get a faster printer or look at using a less complex printer definition. If you are saying that with the fourth document printed, it takes 10-30 mins for the fifth document to start printing, that is another matter. More straws... but with a dot matrix printer it would happen because the print head got so damn hot that the printer slowed down printing to allow the head to cool down. With some cheapo lasers it happens the same - although the fusing roller is temperature controlled it dumps so much heat into the printer internals that, after a sustained heavy print, the laser will over temperature and stop for a while. But to answer your question (omg, I'll never be a politician...).No. Probably (maybe I will make politician after all). The issue isn't the speed of the printer. Documents go into the print queue instantly. Upon completion of a print job, the next job immediately changes its status to PRINTING in the queue. But after a couple consecutive prints, the wait time between status changing to PRINTING and the actual beginning of physical printing increases markedly, going from near instantaneous to as long as 30 minutes. My printer is an HP 920c inkjet and is great. I am quite confident that my increase in memory will solve the print queue problems. Thanks! |
#13
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On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 16:44:02 -0500, in
pan.2004.02.23.21.44.01.560733@ifyoureallywanttok now.com Bob scrawled: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 21:13:43 +0000, °Mike° wrote: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 16:07:28 -0500, in pan.2004.02.23.21.07.27.346868@ifyoureallywanttok now.com Bob scrawled: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 20:27:02 +0000, °Mike° wrote: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 15:09:40 -0500, in pan.2004.02.23.20.09.39.494825@ifyoureallywanttok now.com Bob scrawled: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 19:07:28 +0000, °Mike° wrote: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 13:36:35 -0500, in pan.2004.02.23.18.36.34.334307@ifyoureallywanttok now.com Bob scrawled: snip The other thing is that Windows 98 isn't really capable of utilizing 512MB of RAM. Rubbish! :-), you think so? Ever see a Win9X use 512MB RAM? I doubt it. I've got one running 768MB, and I know numerous people who have 1GB in Win98 systems. Doubt it all you want. I don't care how much RAM you have inside the box, Win9X is not using it all, not anything near 512, let alone 256. I see. You know more about my box than I do, then. That figures.... I know what I know about O/S's and hardware. Which is not as much as you think, obviously. For instance, I have an XP pro machine next to me that's currently running Office 2003 word, outlook, ppoint, publisher, infopath, excel, access, IE, nav corporate edition 7.2 scanning my disk (7200rpm ata133),filezilla ftp downloading an iso image from FreeBSD ftp2 site, real1player,M$ maps and trips, M$ Money and, moviemaker, all open. Also, I'm doing frequency analysis on a 45 minute .wav file in Cooledit Pro. My box is using 252MB RAM, cpu is a 2.4GHz, also the nav scan process is set high priority. This has been running for awhile now, a few minutes at least. Oh, and taskmgr is open as well. My box only has 256MB ram in it. My page file is, of course, going nuts. Now, what difference does it make if I have 512MB in this box,` wouldn't be using it anyway, but I would be paging. Windows extended memory manager does not necessarily work as might think, it will page first depending on address space, application that's using RAM, and a bunch of other factors. Stick these wherever they do the most good: http://uk.geocities.com/personel44/temp/monitor1.jpg http://uk.geocities.com/personel44/temp/monitor2.jpg Show me your mem stats from this box that shows more than 256 actually IN USE. Your 9X, ME boxes, don't/won't use 512MB ram. That makes 481 MB (of 768) RAM currently used (no swap file usage), on Windows 98SE. snip No one's a know-it-all You appear to be. in this business, I'm a bored network admin./sys engineer stuck at home with a broken ****ing ankle. I'm not impressed. -- Basic computer maintenance http://uk.geocities.com/personel44/maintenance.html |
#14
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On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 16:31:44 -0500, in
ICee scrawled: Bob wrote: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 19:07:28 +0000, °Mike° wrote: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 13:36:35 -0500, in pan.2004.02.23.18.36.34.334307@ifyoureallywanttok now.com Bob scrawled: snip The other thing is that Windows 98 isn't really capable of utilizing 512MB of RAM. Rubbish! :-), you think so? Ever see a Win9X use 512MB RAM? I doubt it. This has been well known for years, here's an excerpt from: http://www.memorystock.com/windows-memory.html "Note that if you are upgrading your RAM memory, a computer using Windows 95 or Windows 98 (first edition) will not recognise more than 256MB. Moreover RAM that Windows cannot cache (recognise) will be accessed as slowly as the virtual memory swap file (win386.swp) that Windows creates on the boot hard disk drive to use when the amount of RAM runs out. Therefore, adding too much RAM can slow down a system considerably. Unless you are using a non_Windows operating system such as Linux, and unless you employ the fix a link to which is provided below, your must have Windows 98SE or run a later version to use more than 256MB of RAM. This limitation does not apply to Windows 2000 and Windows XP." Haven't you wondered why the title of the article you quote is "I have more than 512MB of RAM. Why does Windows say I'm out of memory?"? And, that it mentions 512 MB in most of the article, and 256 MB in just one paragraph? It's obviously a typo, or the person writing it has no idea what he/she is talking about. When I was running Win98SE with 512 MB of RAM, the system would typically use most of it (much more than 256 MB) when running a game, or a number of programs at once. A nice utility for checking memory use, as well as setting Vcache and a number of other parameters, is Cacheman: http://www.outertech.com/ Thank you for injecting a little sanity. -- Basic computer maintenance http://uk.geocities.com/personel44/maintenance.html |
#15
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°Mike° wrote:
On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 16:31:44 -0500, in ICee scrawled: Bob wrote: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 19:07:28 +0000, °Mike° wrote: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 13:36:35 -0500, in pan.2004.02.23.18.36.34.334307@ifyoureallywanttok now.com Bob scrawled: snip The other thing is that Windows 98 isn't really capable of utilizing 512MB of RAM. Rubbish! :-), you think so? Ever see a Win9X use 512MB RAM? I doubt it. This has been well known for years, here's an excerpt from: http://www.memorystock.com/windows-memory.html "Note that if you are upgrading your RAM memory, a computer using Windows 95 or Windows 98 (first edition) will not recognise more than 256MB. Moreover RAM that Windows cannot cache (recognise) will be accessed as slowly as the virtual memory swap file (win386.swp) that Windows creates on the boot hard disk drive to use when the amount of RAM runs out. Therefore, adding too much RAM can slow down a system considerably. Unless you are using a non_Windows operating system such as Linux, and unless you employ the fix a link to which is provided below, your must have Windows 98SE or run a later version to use more than 256MB of RAM. This limitation does not apply to Windows 2000 and Windows XP." Haven't you wondered why the title of the article you quote is "I have more than 512MB of RAM. Why does Windows say I'm out of memory?"? And, that it mentions 512 MB in most of the article, and 256 MB in just one paragraph? It's obviously a typo, or the person writing it has no idea what he/she is talking about. When I was running Win98SE with 512 MB of RAM, the system would typically use most of it (much more than 256 MB) when running a game, or a number of programs at once. A nice utility for checking memory use, as well as setting Vcache and a number of other parameters, is Cacheman: http://www.outertech.com/ Thank you for injecting a little sanity. You're welcome, °Mike°. It's hard to understand why he/she believes that particular article, while discounting Microsoft's own documentation on the subject. |
#16
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On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 18:07:39 -0500, in
ICee scrawled: °Mike° wrote: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 16:31:44 -0500, in ICee scrawled: Bob wrote: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 19:07:28 +0000, °Mike° wrote: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 13:36:35 -0500, in pan.2004.02.23.18.36.34.334307@ifyoureallywanttok now.com Bob scrawled: snip The other thing is that Windows 98 isn't really capable of utilizing 512MB of RAM. Rubbish! :-), you think so? Ever see a Win9X use 512MB RAM? I doubt it. This has been well known for years, here's an excerpt from: http://www.memorystock.com/windows-memory.html "Note that if you are upgrading your RAM memory, a computer using Windows 95 or Windows 98 (first edition) will not recognise more than 256MB. Moreover RAM that Windows cannot cache (recognise) will be accessed as slowly as the virtual memory swap file (win386.swp) that Windows creates on the boot hard disk drive to use when the amount of RAM runs out. Therefore, adding too much RAM can slow down a system considerably. Unless you are using a non_Windows operating system such as Linux, and unless you employ the fix a link to which is provided below, your must have Windows 98SE or run a later version to use more than 256MB of RAM. This limitation does not apply to Windows 2000 and Windows XP." Haven't you wondered why the title of the article you quote is "I have more than 512MB of RAM. Why does Windows say I'm out of memory?"? And, that it mentions 512 MB in most of the article, and 256 MB in just one paragraph? It's obviously a typo, or the person writing it has no idea what he/she is talking about. When I was running Win98SE with 512 MB of RAM, the system would typically use most of it (much more than 256 MB) when running a game, or a number of programs at once. A nice utility for checking memory use, as well as setting Vcache and a number of other parameters, is Cacheman: http://www.outertech.com/ Thank you for injecting a little sanity. You're welcome, °Mike°. It's hard to understand why he/she believes that particular article, while discounting Microsoft's own documentation on the subject. It *is* hard to understand, until you consider that intractible individuals are usually so blinkered that they either can't see, or are unwilling to accept, the truth of the matter -- pre-conceived ideas are hard to shift. -- Basic computer maintenance http://uk.geocities.com/personel44/maintenance.html |
#17
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°Mike° wrote:
On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 18:07:39 -0500, in ICee scrawled: °Mike° wrote: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 16:31:44 -0500, in ICee scrawled: Bob wrote: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 19:07:28 +0000, °Mike° wrote: On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 13:36:35 -0500, in pan.2004.02.23.18.36.34.334307@ifyoureallywanttok now.com Bob scrawled: snip The other thing is that Windows 98 isn't really capable of utilizing 512MB of RAM. Rubbish! :-), you think so? Ever see a Win9X use 512MB RAM? I doubt it. This has been well known for years, here's an excerpt from: http://www.memorystock.com/windows-memory.html "Note that if you are upgrading your RAM memory, a computer using Windows 95 or Windows 98 (first edition) will not recognise more than 256MB. Moreover RAM that Windows cannot cache (recognise) will be accessed as slowly as the virtual memory swap file (win386.swp) that Windows creates on the boot hard disk drive to use when the amount of RAM runs out. Therefore, adding too much RAM can slow down a system considerably. Unless you are using a non_Windows operating system such as Linux, and unless you employ the fix a link to which is provided below, your must have Windows 98SE or run a later version to use more than 256MB of RAM. This limitation does not apply to Windows 2000 and Windows XP." Haven't you wondered why the title of the article you quote is "I have more than 512MB of RAM. Why does Windows say I'm out of memory?"? And, that it mentions 512 MB in most of the article, and 256 MB in just one paragraph? It's obviously a typo, or the person writing it has no idea what he/she is talking about. When I was running Win98SE with 512 MB of RAM, the system would typically use most of it (much more than 256 MB) when running a game, or a number of programs at once. A nice utility for checking memory use, as well as setting Vcache and a number of other parameters, is Cacheman: http://www.outertech.com/ Thank you for injecting a little sanity. You're welcome, °Mike°. It's hard to understand why he/she believes that particular article, while discounting Microsoft's own documentation on the subject. It *is* hard to understand, until you consider that intractible individuals are usually so blinkered that they either can't see, or are unwilling to accept, the truth of the matter -- pre-conceived ideas are hard to shift. Yes, unfortunately very true, and all too prevalent. |
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