Forums | Chat | News | Contact Us | Register | PSU Social |
PSU: More fun than a barrel of monkeys dumped in a shark tank.
Forums | Chat | News | Contact Us | Register | PSU Social |
2003-02-18, 05:35 PM | [Ignore Me] #6 | ||
Corporal
|
got 1024 megs or ram DDR right now.. might get some more later.
I don't know if the 512ram is minimum or recommended tho... the dev team did say the final infos were not released yet.. to this is subject to change... but either way, you can never have enought ram |
||
|
2003-02-18, 11:12 PM | [Ignore Me] #13 | ||
Corporal
|
there's a lot of things you don't think about that can speed up your system performance.
always have the highest rotational speed hard drive available. it may not seem like it's a big deal but the seek time on a 7200 versus a 5400 really adds up if you find yourself doing lots of disk reads. realize that the hard drive is THE SLOWEST piece of hardware in your machine. also consider moving up to an ata100 or usb2/firewire2 remember that once you have enough ram, adding more will actually slow you down. if you have any experience in system architecture you know that every time you double the capacity of a chip you increase the time it takes to do a memory read. so if you play perfectly at 1024 don't get more or you might actually find you slow down a little until the software can utilize all that memory. allocate a static swap space on your disc. if you let windows dictate your swap for you dynamically it will slow you down when you are reallocating space. defrag often. keeping your most used files on the outside tracks will speed up (assuming your drive speed doesn't scale versus the location on the disc you are reading from). mostly small stuff that can be done without changing any hardware. stuff like changing your hard disc tho is a huge step. moving to an ata100 would require a pro to install the controller card. just some things to think about before you start planning that next vid card / memory purchase. there are a bunch of ways you can increase speed without shelling out the big bucks. if you are planning on getting new memory make sure you get ddr sticks instead of the older pci format if your board will accept them. they are much faster data reads comparative and you'll notice a fairly sizeable increase in performance. and if you are thinkin about a new vid card consider getting a lower card if you know you can safely overclock it up to be comparable. sometimes it can save you 50 bucks and you will get essentially the same performance. Last edited by Discordja; 2003-02-18 at 11:23 PM. |
||
|
2003-02-18, 11:18 PM | [Ignore Me] #15 | ||
Corporal
|
512 Megabytes = 2^29 bytes = 536870912 bytes
btw, if you have 512 of any number it's MB. 512KB (kilobytes) won't even boot up windows much less play a game. 512GB (gigabytes) is not even economically feasible for you to have (not to mention there are no open market boards that accept that much). the game atm has a sys req of 512 MB of ram. if you have that you are fine as the reqs will be dropping before release. Last edited by Discordja; 2003-02-18 at 11:21 PM. |
||
|
|
Bookmarks |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|