Hi,

In the case of audio, I think 4GB is the low end of acceptable.  I'm a heavy 
garageband user and you will notice the difference between 4 and 8GB depending 
on the resource your project demands.

Ricardo Walker
[email protected]
Twitter, Skype, & AIM: rwalker296
www.mobileaccess.org



On Jun 25, 2011, at 2:08 PM, Neil Barnfather - TalkNav wrote:

> Geoff,
> 
> sorry, just as the iMac ships with Garage Band, and other high end intensive 
> applications pre installed, they do not auto run at start up, so in other 
> words, a bottom end Mac Mini with the minimal spec verse an iMac fully loaded 
> with 16Gb of RAM and the max of everything else, will still load at start up 
> the same amount of things and the same applications, a slight variation of 
> drivers etc, but essentially  the same stuff.
> 
> now this means that at this moment, the iMac could have survived with the 
> same spec as the Mini, with the same performance levels, its only when you 
> start loading stuff into RAM, which is user driven, that the issues might, 
> and I stress might, begin to occur. I do not launch any of these things on my 
> machine, and 4Gb is way more than enough.
> 
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Neil Barnfather
> 
> Talks List Administrator
> Twitter @neilbarnfather
> 
> TalkNav is a Nuance, Code Factory and Sendero dealer, for all your
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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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