if, I'm happy with the upgrade, does not imply that it was worth it, then what 
does it mean, that they are happy that they are down by the money they spent? 
that the machine now uses that little more electricity, I don't see how it 
could be interpreted differently.


Regards,

Neil Barnfather

Talks List Administrator
Twitter @neilbarnfather

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On 25 Jun 2011, at 17:45, Geoff Shang wrote:

On Sat, 25 Jun 2011, Neil Barnfather - TalkNav wrote:

> Naama,

I'm Naama's husband.  Of course, she can answer for herself, but I helped make 
the decision.

> you say you upgraded your iMac, and you are pleased with the results, how 
> much did you have in the past, what speed of RAM, which Mac do you have, what 
> bus speed, what processor, how fast was the spin speed on your hard drive, 
> what cache level etc.

This is a 2011-model iMac withan I5 quad-core and a 500 gb 7200 RPM hard drive. 
 We bought it with the extra RAM.

> you are implying that the pure RAM improvement made this difference, but the 
> implication is that you had a perfect machine and that the RAM slowed things 
> down, you may have had a lesser machine, and the RAM made things better for 
> you.

Actually, she didn't imply this.  She actually said:

"I upgraded my iMac to 8gigs of ram and I am not sorry in the learst."

This is not to say that she would have been unhappy with 4 gb of RAM, just that 
she's happy she opted to buy the extra 4 gb.

It is quite possible that a recent iMac will operate just fine on 4 gb of RAM 
for the foreseeable future.  But macs are not cheap.  As things are, we could 
not really afford to make this purchase, but we did because another computer 
died and we felt it was time to make the switch.  As such, we felt that 8 gb of 
RAM would future-proof the machine as much as possible without being a major 
expense.

It's worth remembering that the iMac by default comes with 4 gb of RAM. Yes, it 
also comes wiht Garage Band and iMovie Maker, and quite possibly that 4 gb of 
RAM is to accommodate these sorts of software.  But the fact is that it does 
ship with it and we use VoiceOver on top of these things.

Someone already mentioned the system requirements for Lion.  I can't help but 
wonder how much RAM the 2012 or 2013 era iMacs will ship with.

I guess my view is that if you can afford the upgrade and plan to get the most 
out of your mac, there's no harm in doing it.  Certainly it won't harm 
anything.  If things are running fine and you can't really justify the expense, 
don't worry about it for now.

Geoff.

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