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>> Other than audio and video data (which is inherantly large), I can't think
>> of anything you can do with a computer that actually uses much memory.
>
> At least, having a lot of memory lets you open many RAM-hungry apps at the
> same time. I can have FinalRender gobbling memory to render a huge scene and
> still be able to edit images with Photoshop while having Firefox opened with
> lots of tabs etc. Also, there are many professional applications where more
> RAM = bigger whatever is the goal of the application. I'm working with
> linear programming for instance, and more RAM = larger models.
OK, but all of what you've described is pretty unusual for home use.
Sure, I run flam3, which eats RAM like candy. But that's because I'm a
nerd. Normal humans don't do things like that.
At any rate, none of this explains why *Vista*, by itself, requires
multiple gigabytes of RAM. (And therefore, presumably, if you want to
run *real applications* that require gigs of RAM, you have to add even
more RAM to your system to accomodate them!)
--
http://blog.orphi.me.uk/
http://www.zazzle.com/MathematicalOrchid*
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