April 29, 2010 at 8:44 pm

Over the time I have had a computer with 3 gigabytes of RAM. But when I didn’t, I used iolo Memory Mechanic. What it does is defrags your RAM and is really quick about it also. I usually use this for when I am done playing a RAM hogging 3-D game on my PC. It also makes those games run extremely quick.  You can download directly from this link. http://images.crucial.com/images/iolo/MemoryMechanic.exe Although it is useful after awhile it doesn’t really change anything in your computer after about 10 runs of it. But all I can tell you is that I have seen such a big difference in my computer since I started using it even though I have 3 Gigs of RAM. The company iolo also showcases more than 40 different programs to help with cleaning your system and increasing your speed. Although the program is only for windows along with the rest of their programs.

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RAM defragmenters are a load of bull. You do realize that RAM (Random Access Memory) excels at random read and write operations? This means that it doesn't matter that much whether the actual page is consolidated in one block or is spread out in pieces across the address space.   If you've looked up how SSDs (solid state drives) work, you'll probably notice that people recommend that you DISABLE Windows disk defragmentation. Why? Because an SSD, which uses flash memory chips, also excels at small random reads and writes. The only reason you need to defragment a hard drive is because the head can quickly read sequential data on a spinning platter, and seeking to another piece of the data involves a lot of "wasted" platter revolutions.

Conner, please no external images. This is because the thumbnailu00c2u00a0mechanismu00c2u00a0doesn't work with external images. Please upload it to Tech Cores directly. Thanks! :)

ok I fixed it I will keep that in mind next time

RAM defragmenters are a load of bull. You do realize that RAM (Random Access Memory) excels at random read and write operations? This means that it doesn't matter that much whether the actual page is consolidated in one block or is spread out in pieces across the address space.

If you've looked up how SSDs (solid state drives) work, you'll probably notice that people recommend that you DISABLE Windows disk defragmentation. Why? Because an SSD, which uses flash memory chips, also excels at small random reads and writes. The only reason you need to defragment a hard drive is because the head can quickly read sequential data on a spinning platter, and seeking to another piece of the data involves a lot of "wasted" platter revolutions.