How much better 4GB RAM over 2Gb

Joined
Oct 27, 2007
Messages
196
Reaction score
1
Points
18
How much better does the mac book pro run with 4gb ram rather than 2gb, with the 2.4ghz core 2 duo cpu?
 
Joined
May 15, 2007
Messages
470
Reaction score
6
Points
18
Location
Wales, UK
Your Mac's Specs
Black macbook 2.16ghz 2GB Ram 160GB hdd | 8Gb Ipod Nano
Well if you currently have 2GB of ram and you never use 100% of it then it dosent make any difference at all.

It will only make a difference if you ever need to actually use 4gb of ram at one time.
 
Joined
Dec 3, 2006
Messages
9,383
Reaction score
417
Points
83
Location
Irvine, CA
Your Mac's Specs
Black Macbook C2D 2GHz 3GB RAM 250GB HD iPhone 4 iPad 3G
For video or photo editing where large scratch files are needed, and best put on RAM rather than on the hard drive.
 
Joined
Apr 28, 2006
Messages
2,542
Reaction score
79
Points
48
Your Mac's Specs
iMac Core Duo 20", iBook G4, iPhone 8GB :)
CPU speed and RAM both serve two different purposes. If it's large files that you work with, the more RAM the better it will be. I'm satisfied with 2GB RAM, although at times when I open a large file I do feel the need for more RAM.
 
Joined
Sep 22, 2007
Messages
192
Reaction score
4
Points
18
Location
Cheyenne, WY
Your Mac's Specs
MBP 2.4 Santa Rosa
How much better does the mac book pro run with 4gb ram rather than 2gb, with the 2.4ghz core 2 duo cpu?

In OS X, not that much better unless your doing very intensive photo or video editing.

In Vista, makes a huge difference!!
 
Joined
Oct 28, 2007
Messages
136
Reaction score
1
Points
18
Your Mac's Specs
24" iMac, 2.4GHz C2D, 4 GB RAM, 320 GB hard drive, OS X 10.5.1
There is a slight speed increase from 2 to 4 even in normal use.
 
Joined
Jul 14, 2007
Messages
589
Reaction score
31
Points
28
Location
SF Bay Area, CA
Your Mac's Specs
See Sig...
I agree with brian, although I would say that it's more of a dramatic speed increase than it is a slight increase.

It will depend on how you use the machine. Right now my MBP has Firefox open (with 6 tabs), Colloquy (in 4 channels on 2 servers), Adium (2 conversations), Skype, Hardware Monitor, Stickies, TextEdit, Calculator and Acrobat open. For me, that's actually a pretty light load... usually I have multiple FF windows open with 15 tabs or so each, and 10-15 IM conversations.

The major difference I noticed going from 2GB to 4GB was that the machine no longer lagged when typing in text boxes such as this one while an application (such as Colloquy) bounced in the dock trying to get my attention. I also found that the machine now feels about as responsive as an XP system with a virtually identical CPU on 2GB of RAM does; with 2GB it felt extremely sluggish by comparison.

You might also check out my RAM buyer's guide, specifically the first section titled "How much ram do I need?" located here:
http://www.mac-forums.com/forums/showthread.php?t=83260
 
Joined
Feb 2, 2004
Messages
12,455
Reaction score
604
Points
113
Location
PA
Your Mac's Specs
MacBook
RAM does NOT "speed up" your computer.

I'll state that again.....

RAM does NOT "speed up" your computer.

Up to a point, adding more RAM can cause your computer to seem faster on certain types of operations. This is because adding RAM lessens the use of the Virtual Memory Manager's swap file. It doesn't magically make your processor or hard disk any faster.

If you don't have enough RAM, then your VMM swaps data to the virtual RAM on your hard disk. Swapping data to the hard disk takes longer than if it were simply stored in actual (not virtual) RAM. More actual RAM can mean less swapping to the hard disk, which means that some applications and programs that require it will run smoother.

There is where you have your "perceived" speed increase.

Also, if you had 2GB of RAM in your computer, and you didn't use applications that required all of it, the VMM would have plenty of room and you would never see it swapping anything. If you then added more RAM after that, it would have no effect.
 
Joined
Jul 14, 2007
Messages
589
Reaction score
31
Points
28
Location
SF Bay Area, CA
Your Mac's Specs
See Sig...
Perhaps it would be more accurate to call it an increase in usability.

No, going from 2GB to 4GB will not magically make your 2.4GHz C2D into a 3.0GHz C2D or whatever. It will not make it equal the performance of one in any way, shape or form. It will also not remove the fact that the HD is (ignoring the optical drive) the single largest bottleneck in a computer in most cases.

HOWEVER, it can certainly make a system more usable. Right now, of 4GB available, I have 2.4GB free. So I'm only using about 1.6GB. Know what? If I take one of the sticks out (or swap in the old pair of 1GB sticks) I'll go back to a system that in certain, select cases can't keep up with my typing. I have tried going back and forth, it is reproducible EVERY time.

I don't disagree that it is highly dependent on how the machine is used, nor would I say that adding RAM is a cure-all. But I noticed a significant increase in usability on this machine from the upgrade. Significant enough that I was considering selling or returning the machine when I bought it (with 2GB) because it was a slug compared to a fresh install of XPSP2 on my desktop (C2D E6600/2GB DDR400 on an i865/6800GT); it was driving me absolutely insane. I don't have that issue after upgrading.
 
Joined
Feb 2, 2004
Messages
12,455
Reaction score
604
Points
113
Location
PA
Your Mac's Specs
MacBook
^what "speeds up" your computer then, that you can easily upgrade?

A computer's actual speed is based mainly on the processor and the hard drive. If you have a system where these things are upgradeable, then you will notice an actual increase. For most of your average tasks though, this increase would be almost unnoticeable with the exception that they would load up faster. You wouldn't really see the dramatic difference until you used applications that are processor intensive. Things like games, or other high data-crunching apps.
Otherwise, the 200Mhz to 400Mhz boost really isn't a huge deal.

A faster hard disk would speed up the VMM when using the swap file.

Those things add real speed, but for the average user, they are overkill.

Don't get me wrong with my last post, adding RAM isn't a bad thing. A computer that operates more efficiently (due to added RAM) is in many ways better than a true "speed demon". It all depends on what you plan on using the computer for.

Generally speaking, if your choice was between a 2.2 Ghz or a 2.6 Ghz processor, then go for the slower processor and boost your RAM.


@ Geeky:
Significant enough that I was considering selling or returning the machine when I bought it (with 2GB) because it was a slug compared to a fresh install of XPSP2 on my desktop (C2D E6600/2GB DDR400 on an i865/6800GT)
You are comparing similar hardware setups, yet two very different operating systems. They each use the hardware in unique ways and how efficiently or fast they run on a certain set of hardware will vary greatly. You really cannot compare the "speed" of OS X to the "speed" of Windows when the hardware is similar. OS X is a bit more of a memory hog than Windows. Granted it handles the RAM more efficiently, it just tends to use a little more of it for some tasks. As you stated, it all depends on how the user utilizes his machine.
 
OP
Ricky55
Joined
Oct 27, 2007
Messages
196
Reaction score
1
Points
18
Of course RAM speeds up your computer!

It may not make your processor physically go faster obviously not but if your computer under heavy load (loads of apps open etc) is wrting to the swap file because there is not enough Ram then by increasing Ram the swap file is used less this will therefore make the computer feel more responsive and faster.

Every processor also needs a certain amount of Ram to feed it smoothly with data.

So I think you are wrong to say that Ram doesn't speed things up.
 
OP
Ricky55
Joined
Oct 27, 2007
Messages
196
Reaction score
1
Points
18
its not a "perceived" speed increase its an actual one if this computer is not churning away writing to the swap file.
 
Joined
May 15, 2007
Messages
470
Reaction score
6
Points
18
Location
Wales, UK
Your Mac's Specs
Black macbook 2.16ghz 2GB Ram 160GB hdd | 8Gb Ipod Nano
RAM does NOT "speed up" your computer.

I'll state that again.....

RAM does NOT "speed up" your computer.

He is right, RAM does not speed up your computer. The only thing RAM does is determin the ammount of applications and processes you run. If you Run lots of applications and you upgread your RAM it will seem faster because it can cope with more processes running at the same time and does not have to use Swap space which slows the whole procss down.

You have to remember the use of swap files is only a back up procedure if your system runs out of RAM. With out Swap Space your computer would just crash if you go over the RAM limit.
 
Joined
Nov 13, 2007
Messages
15
Reaction score
0
Points
1
Location
UK
Your Mac's Specs
MacBook Pro, Intel 2.4Ghz, 4GB RAM. Also; Intel Macbook 2Ghz, Intel MacMini 1.83Ghz
Speed - technical or user answer?

How much better does the mac book pro run with 4gb ram rather than 2gb, with the 2.4ghz core 2 duo cpu?

I have exactly the above MBP config with 4GB of RAM. If, like me, you use apps like Parallels then this gobbles memory slowing down mac applications if insufficient memory is available. Having 4Gb avoids any such issues and still leaves plenty of headroom for other hungry apps.

Whilst the techies might be right about RAM and speed, the user experience (the basis of my justification) is enhanced through a)faster switching of applications; b)memory intensive tasks can be run in parallel, thus improving productivity and throughput; and c) I don't have to think about any technical guff - I just do it! O:) Good luck with your decision.
 
OP
Ricky55
Joined
Oct 27, 2007
Messages
196
Reaction score
1
Points
18
It doesn't just seem faster it would be if you had loads of applications open.
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2008
Messages
1
Reaction score
0
Points
1
Your Mac's Specs
Macbook Pro blah blah
RAM does NOT "speed up" your computer.

I'll state that again.....

RAM does NOT "speed up" your computer.

Up to a point, adding more RAM can cause your computer to seem faster on certain types of operations. This is because adding RAM lessens the use of the Virtual Memory Manager's swap file. It doesn't magically make your processor or hard disk any faster.

If you don't have enough RAM, then your VMM swaps data to the virtual RAM on your hard disk. Swapping data to the hard disk takes longer than if it were simply stored in actual (not virtual) RAM. More actual RAM can mean less swapping to the hard disk, which means that some applications and programs that require it will run smoother.

There is where you have your "perceived" speed increase.

Also, if you had 2GB of RAM in your computer, and you didn't use applications that required all of it, the VMM would have plenty of room and you would never see it swapping anything. If you then added more RAM after that, it would have no effect.

So let me get this straight:

If I perceive that my computer is lagging or running slow because I have many open programs, my computer is NOT "actually" slow? I run 4 gigs now and it is much faster "perceptually" than when I had 2. In my case, it "actually" did make a difference in how fast I type, open programs, multi task and edit.

I realize that the processor has a barrier. However, you will be able to noticeably do more at once with your laptop. A 10000 ghz processor will never reach its potential with 256 gigs of RAM and neither will yours, unless ofcourse you plan on staying within the barrier created by your 2 gigs now.

I encourage anyone who thinks otherwise to get the 4 Gigs. It "seems" alot faster to me.

--maclawyer
 
Joined
Nov 2, 2006
Messages
476
Reaction score
9
Points
18
Your Mac's Specs
24" 2.8ghz IMAC, MB Pro
It doesn't just seem faster it would be if you had loads of applications open.

You are incorrect. More RAM will never speed your computer up. It will only lessen the instances of it slowing down.

There is a difference between getting faster and not getting slower.
 
Joined
Dec 13, 2007
Messages
72
Reaction score
4
Points
8
Location
Toronto, ON
Your Mac's Specs
White MacBook | Core2Duo 2.2GHz | 4GB RAM | 120GB HDD | OS X 10.6.2
In general, you will only go as fast as your slowest component. In many cases, that would be your HDD. If you want to see a significant improvement, get a 7200RPM HDD or better.

In regards to RAM: if you have 2GB right now and you're not maximizing it, getting 4GB will only give you the impression that you're going faster. RAM was created because loading and running everything from your HDD would be too slow. When you run your program, it gets loaded into RAM and it's mainly run from there. As you run more and more program, you use up more and more of that RAM, and when you switch from FF to iTunes or to Adobe, it's all there in RAM for your CPU to access. You will notice a slowdown if you're running too many programs and don't have adequate RAM because programs that aren't being used temporarily needs to get moved to your swap space (which is really just your HDD) so that when you need to access that program again it needs to retrieve from swap (your HDD) before it can run.

So if you have 2GB RAM and you're running enough programs that require 3GB of memory, then some of it sometimes will end up in your swap space cause you to slow down. In that case, if you had 4GB you won't have that happen. But if you have 2GB RAM and you're only utilizing 1.5GB of it, then whether you have 4GB or 100GB RAM it wouldn't make any difference BECAUSE YOU'RE NOT USING THE OTHER 2.5GB (or 98.5GB :p)!!

I got 4GB of RAM in mine because I run a lot of apps (I'm using 2.5GB+ on a consistent basis when I'm doing my web design work -- Flash, Photoshop, Dreamweaver sometimes -- and running FF, Mail, iTunes, etc.)
 

Shop Amazon


Shop for your Apple, Mac, iPhone and other computer products on Amazon.
We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon and affiliated sites.
Top