Windows tries to maximize the availability of physical RAM.  When an
application is inactive or minimized, Windows pushes the app's data to
the page file to make physical RAM available.

Example: Say I'm editing an image with Photoshop.  That eats up a lot of
memory.  If I minimize it to work on a Word document, Windows put the
Photoshop data in the page file to make more RAM available for my active
application.

-----Original Message-----
From: Action Request System discussion list(ARSList)
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Axton
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2008 2:12 PM
To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG
Subject: Re: FW: Server Configuration Recommendations

** Funny thing about Windows, why does it even use the page file when
physical memory is available.  Solaris and BSD do not do this.  The only
time the page file is used on these OS's is when physical memory is
exhausted.  Looking at my desktop right now: 

Total Physical: 2086928k
Physical Available: 730544k
Page File: 1189008k

Axton Grams


On Jan 15, 2008 2:11 PM, Kaiser Norm E CIV USAF 96 CS/SCCE <
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > wrote:


        There are tools for this, but you can use task manager (in
Windows) to 
        do this:
        
        
        
        Here's an excerpt from an article:
        
        
        
        Tip One - OK...I want to pump some life into my old computer.
How much
        RAM should I buy?
        
        In a recent installment of TOTW, I imparted a few ideas on how
to 
        breathe new life into aging computers.  My number one
recommendation was
        to buy more RAM.  I also wrote that to figure out what kind of
RAM you
        needed for your particular computer, you should pull one of the
RAM 
        sticks off the motherboard and read the specs off of it.  But
what I
        left open was the matter of how much RAM to buy.  In that
installment of
        TOTW, I wrote that you should probably just double up on
whatever amount 
        you currently have.  In this installment, I share a better, more
precise
        method of determining just how much memory you need.  Here's
what you
        do:
        
        *       First, turn your computer on and leave it on for two or
three 
        days.  Use it during that time the way you normally would--surf
the Net,
        read e-mail, play your games, do your work (EPRs, PowerPoint
        presentations), etc.  If you do any type of graphics work, like
        manipulating pictures from a digital camera, be sure to do some
of that, 
        too.  And if you commonly open multiple programs at once (like I
do) be
        sure to do that, too.
        *       After the two or three day observation period, click
CTL+ALT+DEL
        and click the TASK MANAGER button.  That opens the Task Manager 
        application.  Now click on the PERFORMANCE tab, which looks like
this:
        
        
        
        
        
        *       Now notice the items I have circled in the image above.
The
        item circled in blue is the total amount of RAM I have installed
in my 
        computer.  The item circled in red is the highest amount of RAM
my
        computer has needed to function properly since I first turned it
on this
        morning.  Notice that the number circled in red is higher than
the
        number circled in blue.  That's a bad thing.  Now you might be 
        wondering, "How did Norm's computer use more RAM than it
actually has?"
        The answer lies in something called virtual memory.  Virtual
memory is
        simulated RAM.  It's a trick your computer uses to fool itself
into 
        thinking it has more RAM than it actually does.  How it does
this is by
        using some of your hard drive as RAM.  Sounds great, and it's a
clever
        trick, but the problem is, compared to real RAM, your hard drive
is 
        slow.  I mean, sloooooooooow.  We're talking F-22 vs. bicycle
here.  So
        every time my computer needs to use more RAM than it actually
has, it
        kicks in the virtual memory trick.  The problem is, my computer
slows 
        way down when it does that because using the hard drive as RAM
is a slow
        process.
        *       Compare the two numbers on your computer.  Do the same
thing I
        did.  To read these number in megabytes (MB) instead of
kilobytes (KB), 
        just divide the numbers by 1000.  So my total memory is 259MB
and my
        peak usage was 343MB.
        *       If your PEAK number is higher than your TOTAL number, go
buy
        more RAM.  Buy at least the amount shown as PEAK.  When you do
buy RAM, 
        I recommend that you buy the largest stick you can afford, and
buy one
        stick instead of two.  That way you'll keep an empty slot
available for
        any future upgrade.
        

        
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