Monday, November 24, 2014

How to Increase virtual Memory if you virtual memory is too low on windows 8

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How to Increase It?

Virtual memory, Also known as the swap file, uses part of your hard drive to effectively expand your RAM, 
Allowing you to run more programs than it could otherwise handle. But a hard drive is much slower than RAM, So it can really hurt performance.
(I discuss SSDs below):

Some basic: your PC has store a hard drive of SSD and memory in the form of RAM chips.
RAM is taster than storage, and you have nuch less of it. It's also more volatile. Shut off the power, and everything in RAM disappears.
You can think of RAM as the immediate workspace, and storage as the file cabinet. When you save a file, you're copying it from RAM to storage.
When there's no room in RAM for that program or file you're trying to load, virtual memory kicks in. 
Some of the code and data in RAM goes to the swap file, making room to load something else. If Windows keeps telling you that your virtual memory is too low,
you can either buy more RAM or expand the swap file. One will cost you money, but the other will slow down your PC.

Here's how to change the virtual memory setting!!
1. Right click on Computer --> and then click on Properties



2. Click Advanced System Setting in the left pane.




3. In the resulting System Properties dialog box's Advanced, click the first Setting button the one in the Performance box.


4. In the resulting Performance Options dialog box, click the Advanced tab.


5. In the Virtual memory box, click the Change button.


6. In the resulting Virtual Memory dialog box, unchecked Automatically manage paging file size for all drives. Then select a drive and change setting for that drive. and text on Custom size:
and then fill in the box Initial size --> click on OK.



Windows lets you set up swap files in different drives, although by default only C has one.
It does't really make a difference. If you create multiple swap files, they'll behave like one big one.
Speed isn't the only problem with virtual memory. Sensitive data that you keep encrypted may reside, encrypted. in the swap file. your average run of mill crook probably
wouldn't bother looking for it there. but the police or the NSA will.

The performance problem is lessened considerably if you put the swap file on a SSD rather than a hard drive.
But there's a problem: SSDs wear out with too much writing, so putting a swap file on one might shorten its life.

If all you have is an SSD, you may want to disable virtual memory entirely. you can do this in the virtual memory dialog box
by selecting the drive it's on, clicking NO paging file, then clicking set

However, doing this could limit the size and number of programs you can run at one time.
you might it, and then turn virtual memory back on after you find the lack of it too restrictive.








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