Computer Science, asked by labonikundfu, 3 months ago

Please tell me how can I make a 2gb ram computer fast

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

There is no single answer to this question. It depends on what kind of PC you have. And you should be thinking about installing 4 GB or more if you can, not 2 GB.

Some systems have all the memory permanently soldered to the motherboard. Those usually can’t be upgraded at all. There are also computers that have SOME permanently installed memory but also have an expansion socket; those can be upgraded.

If you have a computer with memory in DIMM (dual inline memory module) modules, which covers most computers except for some tablets and ultraportable laptops, you install more RAM by putting compatible modules (also called sticks because of their shape) in those sockets. If your computer still has some empty memory sockets you can simply add more. If all the sockets are full you will have to remove some or all of the modules and replace them with ones with more capacity.

There are multiple generations of RAM that you might be installing in a computer: DDR, DDR2, DDR3, and DDR4. (There are even older ones that you don’t need to worry about because any computer that uses them is an antique that you won’t be upgrading.) They are not interchangeable, so you have to use the correct type for your system. There are also two basic form factors: full size DIMMs (used on desktop computers) and SO-DIMMs (small outline; used in laptops and some all-in-ones). Finally, the modules have speed ratings; make sure to use memory that is at least as fast as your system requires. (Using faster memory is fine; it usually has no benefit but it may be all that is available now. Nobody makes DDR3–800 or DDR3–1066 memory any more, for example; you can buy it used if you like, but the faster modules that are being made now will also work on your old system.)

Many computers will get a speed benefit from having matched pairs of memory modules so they can do something called dual channel memory; the computer gets data from both modules in the pair at the same time, allowing twice the speed of data transfer. Not all computers support dual channel memory; laptops, in particular, often do not, and on those computers you will get no special benefit from matched modules. (But you still get the additional RAM.) Dual channel memory access works most reliably if the modules are identical, which is why the manufacturers offer modules in pairs. There are a few computers that offer quad channel memory (four sticks), and there was one series of Intel motherboards and CPUs that required three channel memory.

Every computer that has socketed memory also has a RAM ceiling; the maximum amount of memory that the system can recognize. Usually you can get that number from the user manual or the service manual for your computer; look on the manufacturer’s web site or elsewhere on the internet if you don’t have one. But in some cases the official limit was constrained by the size of memory modules available when the system was introduced and the computer will actually recognize more RAM; check online for reports of success with your computer model. Or just try some bigger modules if you have access to them; you won’t destroy anything if you install the modules correctly, but the computer may refuse to boot or may not find the full capacity of the larger modules.

Explanation:

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