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![]() Member Since: Aug 09, 2007
Posts: 115
![]() Mac Specs: MacBook Pro 2.4 GHz, 160 gig HDD @ 5400, 2 gig RAM, nVIDIA 8600
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i have 2 gigs ram
5400 hdd would more speed improvements (rendering, gaming) come from a 7200 hdd or an upgrade to 4 gigs ram? (im running a 8600 gt w.128 and i think it shares with the ram quite a bit) i have no idea because games like Half Life Orange Box play off of the hdd... but 4 gigs is quite a bit. (it would be the one upgrading it) Thank you! "We, the Chinese people, draft the entire Woo-Tang Clan!" |
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![]() Member Since: Jul 18, 2006
Location: Saint Louis, MO
Posts: 471
![]() Mac Specs: 15" Unibody MBP 2.4 Ghz C2D, 2 GB RAM, 250 GB HDD, 320 GB Time Machine HDD, 1 TB Ext Media Drive
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Personally I don't see you getting a ton of speed improvement as far as gaming is concerned with either of these options. Your load times for levels would maybe improve a small number of seconds, but that's about it. 2 GB RAM is more than enough to run any number of today's games. The only way you're going to NOTICE a ton of difference is by increasing your GPU's ram, which would involve installing a whole new card...rendering this option impossible if you're dealing with a portable.
Another way to get a noticeable increase in performance would be to get rid of any background processes before you start your game. This isn't necessarily because of their memory requirements, but more the CPU cycles they're occupying...quit iTunes, Safari, etc. before you start Half Life or what have you. Report back, let us know what works. MacBook Air Unibody Core i5 1.8 GHz, 4 GB RAM, 128 GB SSD, iPhone 4S 32 GB White |
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![]() Member Since: Aug 09, 2007
Posts: 115
![]() Mac Specs: MacBook Pro 2.4 GHz, 160 gig HDD @ 5400, 2 gig RAM, nVIDIA 8600
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"We, the Chinese people, draft the entire Woo-Tang Clan!" |
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![]() Member Since: Apr 29, 2006
Location: St. Somewhere
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You would likely notice more of an improvement from upgrading to the 7200 RPM hard drive, but pay careful attention to the amount of cache on the drive. The biggest "bang for the buck" will come if you get one with lots of cache (8 MB or more).
Once you have the faster hard drive under your feet, you will notice that applications may launch a little faster and things may generally run a bit faster, but like snoslicer said, you are already well situated for RAM, which is the item that normally makes the biggest improvement. My Macs: PowerMac G5 Quad, 2.5 GHz, 4 Core, Mac Pro, 3.2 GHz 8 Core, Power Macintosh 7500/100 My iStuff: 32 GB iPhone 4, 30 GB iPod Video, 16 GB iPod Touch My OS': Mac OS X Tiger, Mac OS X Snow Leopard, Mac OS X Leopard, Mac OS 8.6, openSUSE 10.3, Win XP I was on the Mac-Forums honor roll for September 2007 |
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