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I looked through here for a bit, but didn't see this question. I am questioning whether it is worth putting more than 4GB of RAM into my current desktop, and whether there are applications that will benefit tangibly from the increased RAM.

For a little more information about my situation, I am a computer science student and am working on increasingly large projects, using IDEs like Eclipse and Visual Studio as well as smaller ones like FreeRIDE. I'm starting to explore virtualization, Linux administration, etc., but only on my own network (one desktop and another laptop).

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  • 2
    Here's +1 so you can vote everyone up ;)
    – hyperslug
    Aug 7, 2009 at 2:00
  • Thanks for all the great answers, everyone - 8GB of RAM is on its way as we speak. :)
    – Feanor
    Aug 10, 2009 at 19:47
  • Just keep in mind that if you are using 32bit applications then they are still going to be limited to a 4GB address space (per process).
    – Sam
    Aug 23, 2009 at 10:28
  • Sam, it's actually 2GB per process in x86 applications.
    – MDMarra
    Aug 23, 2009 at 13:38
  • @MarkM: For Windows, it depends on the program EXE: if the LARGE_ADDRESS_AWARE bit is set, then it gets 4 GB of virtual address space (on 64-bit Windows), otherwise it gets 2 GB.
    – bk1e
    Aug 23, 2009 at 16:31

19 Answers 19

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It's not really any single app using so much RAM, but the fact that you can run so many application simultaneously without paging the disk like crazy.

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  • The extra headroom is really nice Aug 7, 2009 at 1:29
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    +1 Yes, this is by far the most obvious advantage of having lots of RAM on a workstation. (It strikes me as odd that none of the currently top-voted answers mentioned it.)
    – Jonik
    Aug 7, 2009 at 8:06
  • Yes. I'm very tired of long waits while something brings itself back into memory. Aug 23, 2009 at 16:52
  • @Jonik the accepted answer will often be the most comprehensive or most useful, but there is still value to be obtained from other answers. This question being in the community wiki state could have this accepted answer extended to include details of other popular answers. Sep 4, 2009 at 12:43
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VMWare Workstation, VirtualBox...

And pretty much any type of virtualization solution. Massive, massive speed benefit from having loads and loads of RAM. I can run 2-3 VMs simultaneously on my desktop without any noticeable speed problems - quad core, 2.4ghz, 8GB RAM.

Also, RAM is cheap. Order more.

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  • This is also a good answer but more of a narrow field.
    – RCIX
    Aug 8, 2009 at 2:04
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    Laptop RAM not all that cheap. I was looking at nearly $500 for 8GB on mine. Sep 3, 2009 at 20:43
  • @Richard, DDR3 memory is far cheaper than DDR2, especially with large DIMMs. SODIMM DDR3 costs little more over DIMM, while with DDR2 it's significantly more, especially with 4GB (SO)DIMMs. Nov 23, 2010 at 13:31
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Databases can eat up huge amounts of memory both RAM and on-disk.

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High end graphics/video manipulation even audio applications. Not to promote only Adobe, but here are 3 key application groups that benefit from larger quantities of ram:

  1. Graphics - Adobe Photoshop
  2. Video - Adobe Premiere Pro, Final Cut Pro (Mac only), Sony Vegas Pro
  3. Audio - Adobe Soundbooth

Try operating on raw video/audio files without a nice chunk of ram, and you'll see some really serious lag, often even the inability to load the files into the application.

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  • All good points but that's only one aspect of large ram apps
    – RCIX
    Aug 7, 2009 at 1:49
  • @RCIX, this won't be the accepted answer as it's narrow to 1 field of applications, none-the-less hope it's a helpful answer on this question. Aug 7, 2009 at 1:54
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Server Applications:

  1. Web server with partial caching
    • A caching proxy
    • memCached
    • Relational databases
    • Indexed data, like lucene, or some kind of hash-table
    • virtualized servers

Scientific Applications:

  1. MatLab et al.
    • custom (or not) machine learning
    • various things like protein folding.
    • more stuff I'm not qualified to actually list

Media Applications:

  1. broadcast ready video stuff using uncompressed feeds
    • general video editiing, with scrubbing etc would benefit
    • graphic design. The less files you must close the more you can work on.
    • even music production can benefit, say you're working with 256 tracks and a lot of virtual instruments and effects patches, they all maintain state and buffers.

Engineering Applications

  1. Basically any CAD
  2. A lot of simulations that are updated to work with huge datasets.
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    +1 for first answer I saw mentioning CAD. It has always needed large amounts of RAM.
    – Bratch
    Feb 17, 2010 at 21:31
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Um, what about Photoshop, VMs, some large RTS games, etc.

Anything thats manipulating images, especially large ones, will benefit from more ram, as will games that require massive amounts of storage to hold data on units/the map/physics/etc. And of course the more RAM you can feed to a VM the smoother it will be.

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The first thing you will probably need for using 4GB or more of RAM is a shift to 64-bit OS.

Beyond that,

But, going towards more RAM and moving to 64-bit OS has its own constraints.
A lot of the usual stuff is not yet quite stable (or even available in some cases) for 64-bit systems.

Worthwhile question -- Do You Really Need More Than 6 GB Of RAM?, even 4GB

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  • I'm sure visual studio will benefit, hopefully VS2010 can better use of move available ram. Aug 7, 2009 at 1:52
  • Other than drivers there is no reason you cannot continue to run the 'stable' 32-bit versions of apps... and still benefit from more than 4GB, since the 64-bit OS can give each of them their own 32-bit address space backed by their share of physical RAM.
    – jerryjvl
    Aug 7, 2009 at 3:05
  • Not fully true. 32-bit Linux kernels can handle 4GB with the Physical Address Extension(PAE) enabled. Looks like other OSes can too: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…. You could probably mention this in your answer.
    – user4358
    Aug 12, 2009 at 9:06
  • To clarify, my earlier comment refers to the answer, not jerryjvl's comment.
    – user4358
    Aug 12, 2009 at 9:08
  • If you need more than 4GB, you're obviously doing heavy stuff, so 6GB isn't out of the question. The average consumer, no.
    – Phoshi
    Aug 23, 2009 at 13:56
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Applications that are designed to run for long periods benefit from more RAM.

Common examples are Exchange and SQL server. Admittedly, these applications also will benefit from higher disk throughput, but RAM will also help immensely.

RAM is like internet bandwidth - while you don't necessarily see performance increase on a single task, you do see a a reduction in the slow down that occurs as a result of multi tasking. (Bandwidth doesn't necessarily make everything faster, but it does allow you to do more things using the same connection at a much higher rate than a slower connection.)

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If you have an application that is eating up all that ram, that is a separate issue.

Your benefits are in being able to run more applications simultaneously. If you are a programmer that means being able to run Visual Studio and other applications associated with development without having your computer slow to a crawl.

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  • +1 for this too, even if prestomation was 2 minutes quicker in pointing this out :)
    – Jonik
    Aug 7, 2009 at 8:16
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For a workstation doing software development, no, you won't need more than 4GB of RAM.

Huge amounts of RAM are most useful on servers -- the more RAM you have, the more cache you have, and the less often you have to hit disk. Since disk is tremendously slow, avoiding even a few disk accesses can provide tremendous performance gains in random I/O-heavy environments (like heavily loaded servers). The more, the merrier: 128GB of RAM is not at all uncommon on large database servers. HPC applications running on highly parallel machines also benefit from lots of RAM, but those also usually have lots of CPU cores too.

Most desktop-class applications that benefit from large amounts of RAM are 3D-related, for the exact same reason: if you're designing a complex part in SolidWorks or what-have-you, having all the relevant bits cached in RAM makes working with the model quick and easy. It's rare to see workstations above 16GB of memory, but it does happen.

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    I actually disagree quite strongly with this (the first sentence), as a developer with exactly 4GB on my workstation. I'm running Linux with Tomcat (containing several instances of a large webapp), several IntelliJ IDEA projects, Firefox (which seems to memory when kept open for long periods), and Windows XP on VMware, and quite often everything gets unbearably slow, largely because of lack of memory. With needs such as these, having more than 4 GB of RAM would definitely be beneficial.
    – Jonik
    Aug 7, 2009 at 8:13
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Take an application that's 64-bit, running on a 64-bit OS, with hardware that can support 64-bit computing, and add some really gigantic data files. Then >4GB is a good thing.

Off the top of my head scientific computing (statistical analysis, biological modeling, physics simulations...) are some of the most common programs that regularly use over 4GB.

Will it benefit you? Probably not tremendously unless you just really like to have EVERY APP ON YOUR COMPUTER open at the same time... ;-)

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Software 3D render engines are one class of software that greatly benefit from a lot of ram. They usually come bundled with applications such as Maxon Cinema 4D, Autodesk Maya, Softimage XSI etc.

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One of the benefits I've seen is being able to run a virtual machine and give it lots of headroom. That lets me run Visual Studios in a virtual machine and still listen to media player on the local machine without bogging everything down to a crawl.

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Make sure your OS can use more than 4GB (needs to be 64-bit).

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You study computer science. Some school programming projects will need lot of hardware power. I remember that I did several projects on the university that could eat all the RAM i could throw at them.

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The browsers alone can consume lots of RAM, you just need to open many pages. 20 HD Flash videos will do.

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Crysis's Editor, Sandbox 2, benefits hugely. Any application that has to deal with an awful lot of information quickly will thank you.

Personally, I have 2GB of RAM, and almost never fill it. The only reason I'd get more would be to remove that "almost", and be safe in the knowledge my PC can take pretty much whatever I throw at it. (except a brick, my case isn't that hard)

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Agree with Lance Roberts your OS must support it, read this (do check out comments) if it doesn't - Making Use Of Non-Addressable Wasted RAM On 32 Bit Systems, hope this helps.

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@me: 32 bits OS CAN make use of more than 3 or 4GB of RAM, using PAE (phisical address extension). This feature has been around since Pentium Pro, and allows to map up to 64GB, allowing each process a maximun of 4GB addressable memory space. Windows XP and Vista cripple this feature, due to driver incompatibilities. For more info, please read http://josearrarte.com/blog/2009/08/30/64GB-de-RAM-en-un-sistema-operativo-de-32-bits/ (in spanish).

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