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Intel (R)
Pentium (R) 4 CPU 2.80GHz
2.80 GHz, 992 MB of RAM

2006-12-11 03:00:19 · 8 answers · asked by blue-in-groove 6 in Computers & Internet Hardware Desktops

8 answers

You actually have exactly one gigabyte of RAM. 32 megabytes of that RAM is being appropriated by your video processor to do its own work, so is unavailable to the CPU for regular processing.

This configuration is called "shared memory" and often is the case when the video processor is part of the system motherboard, rather than an add-on card. You could actually recover that extra 32Mb if you upgraded your system with a new video card, and disabled the built-in video.

2006-12-11 04:44:21 · answer #1 · answered by Dave 2 · 1 0

There are two (well actually three) general types of memory

RAM (computer chip) memory which is used by programs to provide faster processing

DISK STORAGE: This is the memory on your hard disk

Video memory (don't worry about this... your video card has some memory built into it)

Your RAM is pretty good per your list.

If you want to see how your hard disk space is, expressed as a percentage of what is available vs. what it will hold, right click your button and then

Highlight your dirve button (Usually "C" but some people have more then a single drive) and right click it.

Choose and you will get a pie chart with the statistics for that hard drive.

Repeat the process for any other drives.

Hope that answers your question...

2006-12-11 03:15:53 · answer #2 · answered by ca_surveyor 7 · 0 1

As your previous answers: 992 is your RAM (random access memory) - available to run your programes.
Try http://www.crucial.com for more information - they have an application which can tell you how many memory slots are in your computer, how much RAM you have and how much more your PC can handle (they will then offer to sell you the RAM...). they can also tell you other stuff about your video card etc... all through just a couple of clicks on the internet - very clever...I've used them with a couple of different PC's and it works very well....Hope this helps

2006-12-11 03:13:44 · answer #3 · answered by ? 7 · 0 0

You have nearly 1 Gigabyte of memory (992 MB) which is probably enough for most applications.

2006-12-11 03:03:23 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

digital reminiscence is an area on your complicated force that domicile windows makes use of in conjunction including your laptop's reminiscence. that's why they call it digital. often, in case you're utilising a image editor and say an mp3 participant all on the same time, regardless of you have been modifying (as in cropping pictures or putting titles on pictures or video clips) those 'steps' are saved on digital reminiscence so which you will 'undo' your edits (as in returning the photograph back to the way it became into in the previous you edited it), then your digital reminiscence gets too finished. besides, close quite a number of classes and spot if that helps. additionally, that's a very good concept to close all your classes and reboot (re-start up) your laptop as quickly as in awhile. somewhat in case you basically loaded a clean application or 2. Rebooting (assuming you have saved all your artwork/pics, and so on) will come to a call this application. If it happens too oftentimes, that's beneficial to verify in case you could improve/upload reminiscence on your laptop. i'm hoping this facilitates.

2016-10-18 02:49:01 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

you have exactly 1GB=1024mb of memory 992mb for your general computing and rest of 32 mb is reserved for graphic proccesing.

2006-12-11 05:55:46 · answer #6 · answered by GoLd E 5 · 1 0

to find out how much memory you have click start go to all programs, acessories, system tools, and click on disk defrag. that will compact all existing files you have and will tell you how much remaining memory you have to use.

2006-12-11 03:09:11 · answer #7 · answered by jsloaner07 2 · 0 3

Your almost at 1 gig.

2006-12-11 03:08:31 · answer #8 · answered by dark_lipps 2 · 0 2

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