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| Afroman | |||
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Group: Members Posts: 121 Member No.: 1061 Joined: 28-July 07 |
Why is "System Cache" in Physical Memory so large, and "Free" memory so small?
Is there a way to throttle "System Cache" |
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| captainhams | |||
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Group: Members Posts: 112 Member No.: 732 Joined: 04-October 07 |
"John"
Cache is freed up as more memory is required for applications so you do not need to do anything, This is by design to ensure the maximum cache is used where ever possible. (Think about it - why have free memory when you can use it for the running apps then if they start more apps reduce the system cache for those new running apps etc) For example my x64 system with 4GB of RAM and only 4 apps open has only 7MB of free memory but 2GB of system cache - but as I open more applications the system cache reduces, so my free memory is usually close to zero but cache shrinks as needed. Mike Brannigan |
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| busyretiree | |||
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Group: Members Posts: 643 Member No.: 4 Joined: 07-October 07 |
Mike Brannigan wrote:
John - Mike Brannigan has given you an elegant, thorough answer. Here's another, blunter one: The days of DOS and Win9x/ME are over. With modern operating systems unused memory is wasted memory. So tinker with something else. ;-) Malke Elephant Boy Computers elephantboycomputers.com "Don't Panic!" MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User |
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