
Jeff Atwood explains why Vista uses so much memory.
"You have to stop thinking of system memory as a resource and start thinking of it as a a cache. Just like the level 1 and level 2 cache on your CPU, system memory is yet another type of high-speed cache that sits between your computer and the disk drive. And the most important rule of cache design is that empty cache memory is wasted cache memory. Empty cache isn't doing you any good. It's expensive, high-speed memory sucking down power for zero benefit. The primary mission in the life of every cache is to populate itself as quickly as possible with the data that's most likely to be needed - and to consistently deliver a high 'hit rate' of needed data retrieved from the cache."
Member since:
2005-07-06
ARE interesting and probably 'new'

Have to be, to some extent, since nobody would give a rat's ass if they weren't even interesting. 'New' is good, even if it's just new compared to their last version, since that sometime can mean improvement. And even if they just implement stuff that's been around elsewhere and proven to be good, that's also fine since at least it shows they recognized they have to improve and tried to do so. Should just drop the innovation-speach already