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2003-07-07, 10:45 PM | [Ignore Me] #1 | ||
Private
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I currently play PS on my laptop. It is a Dell Inspiron 8200. My specs are:
2.0 ghz p4-m 512mb DDR pc2100 RAM ati mobility radeon 9000 win XP home 40gb hard drive DSL connection w/laptop connected through 802.11b wireless network It slows down in bigger battles and it is difficult to kill other people when it slows down in firefights. It runs good when there isn't too many other people around, but it sometimes skips a frame or two there as well. I have most settings turned off and run on low. I think the problem is that i don't have enough RAM. I think the 512 RAM in it is all one stick so the other slot is open to another stick of 256 or 512. However, the Dell website has up an absolutely outrageous price of $215 (yes this is not a joke) for a stick of 512 for an Inspiron 8200. (i could buy a freakin 9700 pro for less than that) Please tell me there is some other place to get RAM for a laptop, becasue if I'm not mistaken, desktop RAM won't work in a laptop. (or will it?) I can't afford that much for more RAM and would really like to play PS without slowdown. Another question I have is how do I know if my processor and RAM are at the same speed? I've heard that if they are on a 1:1 basis, it runs faster. How can I check this to make sure they are at the same speed? |
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2003-07-08, 09:43 AM | [Ignore Me] #2 | ||
Sergeant
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Hello,
It is a laptop, and chances are the RAM will be proprietary. You'll be forced to buy it from Dell. There might be other sources out there for RAM that will fit in the laptop, but I wouldn't recommend spending money on it. The reason the RAM is so much more expensive than desktop RAM is because it is on a lot smaller board than desktops would have. Smaller sized = higher price. Your processor and RAM are fine, and the laptop was designed with such things in mind. The main problem with laptops is IRQ sharing. They are not designed for gaming (most are not), and you will always have poor performance. You could disable a bunch of hardware in your BIOS and then risk messing the system up by changing it from ACPI to Standard PC, but I do not recommend this with laptops. Sorry for the bad news, |
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