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4 answers

click START then RUN and then type dxdiag, their you can see your system specs.

2007-10-01 15:51:30 · answer #1 · answered by guro 4 · 0 0

I dont know if this is what your looking for but if your running Windows Xp Home Edition...you can do a Cntrl Alt Delete (press at the same time) the Windows Task Manager will come up....look for the tab Performance and you will see a graph of the CPU Usage and Page File Usage History and Physical Memory and Kernel Memory.....hope this is helpful!!!!!

Spock343

2007-10-01 23:08:39 · answer #2 · answered by spock343 2 · 0 0

go to control panels. click on "system" and a window will pop up and in an area labeled "computer" it should say xxx of of RAM. the other methods labeled above are to complicated ot simply find the amount of RAM you are using. the area i told you about gives you other information as well, such as processor speed etc...

2007-10-02 00:22:37 · answer #3 · answered by Lyle J 4 · 0 0

Go to Google and find Google Gadgets--they have one called Multi-meter. It tells you at all times how much ram and cpu you are using.

2007-10-02 12:20:02 · answer #4 · answered by Nemo the geek 7 · 0 0

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