9.7-inch iPad Pro and iPhone SE both have 2GB of RAM
Ars Technica  /  Andrew Cunningham


Enlarge / The 9.7-inch iPad Pro isn't quite the equal of the 12.9-inch version.
Apple has started distributing both the iPhone SE and the 9.7-inch iPad Pro to 
journalists, and one of the first things to come to light has been the amount 
of RAM in each device. Memory in iDevices has a big impact on performance and 
general usability, but Apple almost never actually talks about it so we need to 
have hardware in hand before we can get the full story.

The good news is that the iPhone SE has the same 2GB of RAM as the iPhone 6S 
and 6S Plus despite its smaller size and lower price. The not as good news is 
that the 9.7-inch iPad Pro has the same 2GB of RAM as the iPad Air 2, not the 
4GB of RAM on offer in the 12.7-inch version.

RAM doesn't have quite the same effect in an iOS device as it does in laptops 
and desktops—iOS was originally designed for low RAM devices and even though 
current iPhones and iPads have much more RAM than the 128MB in the first 
iPhone, the OS is still aggressive about ejecting apps from memory. Giving an 
iPhone or iPad more RAM doesn't necessarily speed up general performance, but 
it does mean that apps and browser tabs need to be ejected from memory less 
often. Today this is particularly beneficial in Safari, which needs to reload 
tabs when they're ejected from RAM—at best this process adds a couple extra 
seconds to what ought to be a simple tab switch, and at worst you don't have 
connectivity and so can't see the tab you're trying to open.

For the iPad Pro, the consequences could be more far reaching, just because 
developers are going to be able to do things with 4GB of RAM that just won't 
fit into 2GB of RAM. And Apple has occasionally stopped supporting certain 
devices because of RAM limitations rather than raw performance limitations—the 
original iPad had 256MB of RAM and didn't get either iOS 6 or iOS 7, while the 
iPhone 4 with the same A4 chip got both updates. It's going to be fine for now 
(many actively supported iPads still have 1GB or even 512MB of RAM), but it 
could one day be a problem nevertheless.



Original Article: 
http://arstechnica.com/apple/2016/03/9-7-inch-ipad-pro-and-iphone-se-both-have-2gb-of-ram/


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