O
OhioGuy
About a year ago, my sister bought a new computer from Dell. It has
a Pentium 4 processor running at about 3 GHz, but I noticed that the
hard drive is churning a lot whenever any program is launched. In fact,
it churns a LOT. The system seems rather sluggish because of this, and
takes much longer to do much of anything than my 3 year old Sempron
based Compaq. (running at about 2 GHz)
I checked out the memory, and found that they are running Windows XP
with only 512 MB of RAM. I looked up info on the motherboard, and it is
limited to installing two 512 MB sticks of DDR1 RAM.
This reminded me of an old ISA card with memory that I remember
seeing once. You could just add memory to your system by plugging the
card in.
Do they make anything like that on PCI cards these days, or maybe
something like a riser card that would let me add 4 GB of DDR2 RAM to
their system or anything? It seems silly to have such a fast system
that is horribly crippled by only being able to accept DDR1 RAM, and
only up to 512 MB dimms at that.
Thanks! I'm hoping there is some way around the memory limitation.
a Pentium 4 processor running at about 3 GHz, but I noticed that the
hard drive is churning a lot whenever any program is launched. In fact,
it churns a LOT. The system seems rather sluggish because of this, and
takes much longer to do much of anything than my 3 year old Sempron
based Compaq. (running at about 2 GHz)
I checked out the memory, and found that they are running Windows XP
with only 512 MB of RAM. I looked up info on the motherboard, and it is
limited to installing two 512 MB sticks of DDR1 RAM.
This reminded me of an old ISA card with memory that I remember
seeing once. You could just add memory to your system by plugging the
card in.
Do they make anything like that on PCI cards these days, or maybe
something like a riser card that would let me add 4 GB of DDR2 RAM to
their system or anything? It seems silly to have such a fast system
that is horribly crippled by only being able to accept DDR1 RAM, and
only up to 512 MB dimms at that.
Thanks! I'm hoping there is some way around the memory limitation.