Thats great, so then, how does this come to any where near the implication that a person writing emails and web surfing and even maybe for one reason or another doing cut and paste wav editing need two gb of ram? seems more like a sales pitch to me for the wrong reason. maybe in os 7.x ram "Made the computer run faster" and all that jazz we heard in the ninety's but this is not the case anymore, not with apple Gabe Vega The BlindTechs Network Website: http://blindtechs.net Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (602) 476-2307 (562) 261-5277 (866) 714-4244 ----- Original Message ----- From: "Kafka's Daytime" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "General discussions on all topics relating to the use of Mac OS X by the blind" <[email protected]> Sent: Sunday, September 10, 2006 8:34 PM Subject: Re: FYI: Memory Usage Mac OS X
> Hi Gabe, > > *shrug* This is pretty much the canonical explanation of memory > management on Mac OS X. A Google search on 'Mac OS X Memory > Management' (or perusal of any of the popularly available Mac OS X > 'How To' books) should bring you to the same considered conclusion. > > I'm more than happy to learn from your explanation of Mac OS X memory > management - if it differs from the canonical explanation. > > Here's the same information posted at Ohio State University tech help > center. > > http://8help.osu.edu/1261.html > > ...and here is a bit of relevant information from Bob Levitus at > OSXFAQ (he's the author of Mac OS X for Dummies): > > http://www.osxfaq.com/dailytips/06-2002/06-14.ws > > Joe > > On Sep 10, 2006, at 11:06 PM, Gabriel Vega wrote: > > > Joe, this is the most unprofessional and most laughable piece of > > evidents > > presented on this topic. paging has been a piece of technology used in > > computers since ram and hdd's have been working together and being > > that > > again as stated in other viable and reliable sources yet a > > home.mac.com > > page. unix/bsd/linux handle ram differently and in regards to > > paging do it > > more efficiently. beyong music producing such as what kevin and > > jerry ram is > > "NOT" essential enough at this time to be purchased in such a > > waisteful > > manner. > > Gabe Vega > > The BlindTechs Network > > Website: http://blindtechs.net > > Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > (602) 476-2307 > > (562) 261-5277 > > (866) 714-4244 > > ----- Original Message ----- > > From: "Kafka's Daytime" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > To: "General discussions on all topics relating to the use of Mac > > OS X by > > the blind" <[email protected]> > > Sent: Sunday, September 10, 2006 4:00 PM > > Subject: OT: FYI: Memory Usage Mac OS X > > > > > >> Gabe et. al., > >> > >> Here is an elegant little bit on why more memory for Mac OS X results > >> in better performance [excerpted from a nice 'Memory Usage' page > >> found at the following link: http://homepage.mac.com/simx/mughelp/ > >> English/overview.html]: > >> > >> --begin excerpt > >> > >> ...it should be noted that Mac OS X's memory management system is not > >> without it's downsides. The biggest change from Mac OS 9 to Mac OS X > >> is that the system and it's applications use up a LOT more memory. > >> Mac OS X's system requirements state that it needs 128 MB of RAM, but > >> many people recommend a minimum of 512 MB for Mac OS X to run > >> acceptably. This amount is subjective, but one thing is for sure: the > >> more RAM that is made available to Mac OS X, the faster it runs. > >> > >> Also, Mac OS X tends to eat up all available memory, even if there is > >> a lot of it available. This is because Mac OS X caches as much data > >> as it can in memory, so that it can potentially reuse that data > >> without having to re-cache it (the UNIX term for caching data in > >> memory is "paging in" memory). Mac OS X's performance drops when all > >> available memory is used, because it has to start removing things > >> from memory ("paging out"), which has a performance hit. This problem > >> is much more prevalent in Mac OS X because applications are not > >> limited to a specific amount of memory; they just take as much as > >> they need, so free memory dwindles fast. > >> > >> --end excerpt > >> > >> Joe > >> > >> > >> > > > > > > > > >
