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I am thinking about switching to OSX but I don't know how much RAM I will need. Just for med school purposes has anyone ran out of ram?
I have an early-2014 MBA with 4gb RAM. I have never had a problem unless I've left Safari open for weeks and never closed it out. Once I close it out and re-open Safari, problem gone!I am thinking about switching to OSX but I don't know how much RAM I will need. Just for med school purposes has anyone ran out of ram?
In the past that was true, but I just didn't find that to be the case in medical school.It's always seemed to me that upgrading RAM is one of the most sure-fire ways to ensure the longevity of a computer.
It's always seemed to me that upgrading RAM is one of the most sure-fire ways to ensure the longevity of a computer.
You'd definitely hit a bottleneck somewhere else before you'd ever need 32 GB of RAM. I've built computers for a few years now, and 32 GB is absolutely overkill. And for 99.99% of users, it would be like getting a car with a 16 cylinder engine for just cruising around town, and occasionally going on the freeway. The only time you would need more than 8 GB of RAM is if you are into heavy video editing software, or into heavy gaming with 4k graphics or something (and at that point, you'd probably need a dedicated video card with 6+ GB RAM, and a core i7 processor).8GB should be standard minimums. Just feels better. Then again if I had the money I'd get 32GB. You can never have enough RAM.
If you have a really old computer, usually it didn't have enough RAM to upgrade to a newer operating system. . If you have a regular hard drive, upgrading to a solid state drive is the easiest way to get a HUGE performance boost without doing anything else. Nowadays, though, the bottleneck usually occurs with the processor. Older computers running on ancient processors are essentially worthless because replacing a processor is usually impossible because the CPU has to be compatible with the motherboard. And newer CPUs almost always aren't. So make sure you consider the processor when buying a computer as well, OP. I wouldn't get anything worse than an intel i5 (or AMD equivalent).It's always seemed to me that upgrading RAM is one of the most sure-fire ways to ensure the longevity of a computer.
I didn't even know you could get a SSD with that much storage. My 2012 rMBP has only 250 GB SSD, and it's about full. Are these able to be replaced by the folks at the stores and transferring the data or is it worth just buying a new computer for what they'll likely charge?My MBP has 4gb of ram on the video card. I don't know why or imagine that I will ever use it, but it has it. I see no reason to not max the computer's ram since it is dirt cheap compared to the rest of the computer. However, I agree with @sazerac. I gave them so much **** for putting a 2 TB SSD and told them that whatever cash they burned to put it in could have just been given to me. But, I already know that fast storage is going to be the biggest issue at this point. The hybrid table and our OR cameras output uncompressed 1080 or 4k, which is just plain stupid. The last case video that I put together was just over an hour of operating time with 3 feeds, 100gb without breaking a sweat -.-.
Honestly it's not that hard to do yourself. Just search tutorials on how to open your specific computer. You can clone your old drive, or just set it up as a "new computer" by installing the OS from a bootable USB drive, and then transfer the files via a sata to USB cable (my preference). If it were me, and I had a well built computer with a good processor I would definitely just replace the hard drive. Buying a SSD with over 250 GB will probably be north of a hundred dollars though. If you don't want to do it yourself, I would just buy a SSD online, then ask a place how much it would cost them in labor to put it in. That way you'd probably have less of a chance of getting screwed over.I didn't even know you could get a SSD with that much storage. My 2012 rMBP has only 250 GB SSD, and it's about full. Are these able to be replaced by the folks at the stores and transferring the data or is it worth just buying a new computer for what they'll likely charge?
I was looking at the portable SSDs from samsung recently. Maybe I should just upgrade the one in the computer.
Okay, I found something that required a ton of RAM this morning, granted not on my Mac, Astroneer was using 14 gb of RAM on its own. Then again, maybe playing non-optimized pre-alpha games isn't a great test example.
I didn't even know you could get a SSD with that much storage. My 2012 rMBP has only 250 GB SSD, and it's about full. Are these able to be replaced by the folks at the stores and transferring the data or is it worth just buying a new computer for what they'll likely charge?
I was looking at the portable SSDs from samsung recently. Maybe I should just upgrade the one in the computer.
Not everyones a rocket surgeon
Here is an article about the Transcend kit I used: http://www.imore.com/how-upgrade-your-macbook-air-more-storageI didn't even know you could get a SSD with that much storage. My 2012 rMBP has only 250 GB SSD, and it's about full. Are these able to be replaced by the folks at the stores and transferring the data or is it worth just buying a new computer for what they'll likely charge?
I was looking at the portable SSDs from samsung recently. Maybe I should just upgrade the one in the computer.
4 GB is plenty for flipping through powerpoints all day, every day for 2 years.
I think you might be confusing RAM for memory, as you don't really 'run out of RAM'. Memory = how much space you have to store stuff. RAM = (loosely) how fast your programs will run.
I didn't even know you could get a SSD with that much storage. My 2012 rMBP has only 250 GB SSD, and it's about full. Are these able to be replaced by the folks at the stores and transferring the data or is it worth just buying a new computer for what they'll likely charge?
I was looking at the portable SSDs from samsung recently. Maybe I should just upgrade the one in the computer.
Yep technically both RAM and ROM are memory (random access memory [RAM] and read only memory [ROM]). Although RAM is generically referred to as just "memory" and ROM is referred to as "storage".What are you talking about? RAM literally stands for random-access memory. You certainly do run out of RAM if you have too many processes running.
If you have static documents, pics, or movies that you don't use often, consider an external hard drive for way cheaper. If you need something portable, a 128gb flash drive is around $30 bucks nowadays.
Cameras taking 30+ MB raw photos and 4k video doesn't take long to fill.I don't understand what you guys are storing that eats up so much space. I've got a 250gb SSD but it's not even 2/3 full after years of putting stuff on it.
Cameras taking 30+ MB raw photos and 4k video doesn't take long to fill.
I don't understand what you guys are storing that eats up so much space. I've got a 250gb SSD but it's not even 2/3 full after years of putting stuff on it.
The cost-effective answer is an SSD jump drive, not upgrading your internal SSD.
It is about convenience. Lugging around external drives runs the risk of physically losing the drive, which happens quite often. Also not unheard of for physical damage to be an issue. But, most importantly, it costs time. For example, I have 4 surgical videos that I'm currently working on. Moving ~100gb on and off of an external drive every time I switch projects is a pain in the ass. Storing things that you don't use/look at on an external makes a lot of sense. But, depending on what you do with your computer, your working storage needs can easily be 1 TB+.
As another aside, if you do any gaming on the computer, that space also disappears fast. I didn't realize how much disk space many modern games take. What little I play now is generally older, but unless things have changes a lot recently, most people recommend games be played off of your internal SSD.
RAM (Random Access Memory) and memory are more or less interchangeable terms in this context. What you're calling "Memory" is generally referred to as "storage".4 GB is plenty for flipping through powerpoints all day, every day for 2 years.
I think you might be confusing RAM for memory, as you don't really 'run out of RAM'. Memory = how much space you have to store stuff. RAM = (loosely) how fast your programs will run.
For the 2012 rMBP, there are adapters out there that will allow you to use standard mSATA drives. I upgraded mine to 1TB (Samsung Evo 1TB is around $350) that way and stuck the original drive (which was a 512GB unit) in an external enclosure that I got for $30.I didn't even know you could get a SSD with that much storage. My 2012 rMBP has only 250 GB SSD, and it's about full. Are these able to be replaced by the folks at the stores and transferring the data or is it worth just buying a new computer for what they'll likely charge?
I was looking at the portable SSDs from samsung recently. Maybe I should just upgrade the one in the computer.