| From: Howard Gibson via talk <talk@gtalug.org>
| 
|    I have long ago given up trying to run computers on 8GB RAM.  For 
|    GNU/Linux, 16GB minimum.

What tasks to you do that challenge computers with only 8 GiB?

For me, it is Firefox with a lot of tabs.  I'm sure that some web pages 
are way more RAM-intensive than others (see about:performance) but I 
rarely pick pages based on weight.  I admit that I keep way too many tabs 
open but mostly on my desktop which has 24 GiB of RAM.

I regularly run Fedora / GNOME desktop on 4 G machines.  They work but are 
not fast, for multiple reasons.  They have Atom-microarchitecture 
processors and eMMC "disks", both of which slow them down.  On the plus 
side, they are delightfully inexpensive, small, energy efficient, and 
silent.

I have several notebooks, of varying ages, with 8 GiB of RAM.  They all 
work fine.

RAM is cheap enough to overbuy, except when you are forced to buy it with 
the computer.  Manufacturers really pad the price of computers with more 
RAM.  Most notebooks now come with soldered RAM, not socketed.

Some notebooks come with soldered RAM plus an empty or occupied socket.  
That's not as good as two sockets. Best performance, all other things 
being equal, is to have the same RAM size in the socket and soldered.  
Any variation comes at a cost.

One reason I bought this particular cheap notebook is that it came with a 
perfect memory configuration for upgrading to 16 GiB.

A certain amount of RAM is tied up in fixed overhead assignments: the 
kernel, the memory used by the iGPU, the memory used by NVMe drives.  So 
doubling RAM makes more than twice as much RAM available for applications.

In this particular case, adding RAM added RAM bandwidth, improving the 
speed of computation.
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