Talking as a Windows user only rather than an SQL expert (I'm not even 
good enough to call myself a beginner!)

Are we talking about a small netbook type with only say 8GB of memory 
and no hard drive.

If a Windows m/c has a hard drive, surely virtual memory 
(drive-swapping) comes into play?
It would, of course become v-e-r-y slow in comparison.


eLaReF




On 18/04/2011 14:46, Pavel Ivanov wrote:
> You won't be able to insert. The statement will fail.
>
> Pavel
>
>
> On Mon, Apr 18, 2011 at 9:44 AM, Adam DeVita<adev...@verifeye.com>  wrote:
>> Good day,
>>
>> What happens if you insert more than your RAM size into an in memory
>> database?
>> (I'm particularly interested in the Windows context).
>>
>> regards,
>> Adam
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