F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Boost Readyboost and enhance performance by increasing RAM via USB.

Boost Readyboost and enhance performance by increasing RAM via USB.

Boost Readyboost and enhance performance by increasing RAM via USB.

Pages (2): 1 2 Next
M
Meowables
Senior Member
608
09-16-2016, 12:59 PM
#1
I was exploring my laptop setup—Core i3 2330m, 4GB RAM, Windows 7 32-bit—and discovered Readyboost. I also looked into adding more RAM using a USB flash drive. On Amazon, I found Sandisk drives (2x32GB) totaling 64GB storage. I’m curious if adding that extra drive would increase my RAM capacity or adjust the numbers somehow. I intend to use one or both drives with Readyboost enabled. Thanks for the helpful advice!
M
Meowables
09-16-2016, 12:59 PM #1

I was exploring my laptop setup—Core i3 2330m, 4GB RAM, Windows 7 32-bit—and discovered Readyboost. I also looked into adding more RAM using a USB flash drive. On Amazon, I found Sandisk drives (2x32GB) totaling 64GB storage. I’m curious if adding that extra drive would increase my RAM capacity or adjust the numbers somehow. I intend to use one or both drives with Readyboost enabled. Thanks for the helpful advice!

H
hanniie_
Junior Member
36
09-16-2016, 01:44 PM
#2
Readyboost is... just practical in very narrow situations. It doesn't increase RAM. Never has, and never will. If you want to boost performance: swap the HDD for an SSD. If you're already using an SSD, Readyboost won't help.
H
hanniie_
09-16-2016, 01:44 PM #2

Readyboost is... just practical in very narrow situations. It doesn't increase RAM. Never has, and never will. If you want to boost performance: swap the HDD for an SSD. If you're already using an SSD, Readyboost won't help.

E
explosecube
Junior Member
8
09-17-2016, 12:59 PM
#3
Is the 4GB already fixed in place? Can you increase the available RAM further?
E
explosecube
09-17-2016, 12:59 PM #3

Is the 4GB already fixed in place? Can you increase the available RAM further?

J
Jayhawk_Down
Senior Member
350
09-19-2016, 01:59 PM
#4
ReadyBoost was designed to act as a disk cache for slower hard drives. This means it needs a big, fast USB drive to be helpful (especially when paired with a slow HDD). Even the quickest USB sticks on the market fall short of the speed of today’s SSDs, let alone RAM. USB drives also aren’t ideal for frequent writes. If you treated ReadyBoost like permanent RAM, it would be just as bad as using swap instead of actual physical memory—extremely slow.
J
Jayhawk_Down
09-19-2016, 01:59 PM #4

ReadyBoost was designed to act as a disk cache for slower hard drives. This means it needs a big, fast USB drive to be helpful (especially when paired with a slow HDD). Even the quickest USB sticks on the market fall short of the speed of today’s SSDs, let alone RAM. USB drives also aren’t ideal for frequent writes. If you treated ReadyBoost like permanent RAM, it would be just as bad as using swap instead of actual physical memory—extremely slow.

A
70
09-19-2016, 05:02 PM
#5
I haven’t started it yet, it seems to be a 2009 Dell Latitude e5440.
A
Awesome_Aaron_
09-19-2016, 05:02 PM #5

I haven’t started it yet, it seems to be a 2009 Dell Latitude e5440.

X
xExplosive_
Junior Member
4
09-21-2016, 01:29 PM
#6
There isn’t just one method to increase RAM; you can either physically install more RAM sticks or use external modules.
X
xExplosive_
09-21-2016, 01:29 PM #6

There isn’t just one method to increase RAM; you can either physically install more RAM sticks or use external modules.

M
Martin69
Junior Member
11
09-22-2016, 10:58 PM
#7
The only method to increase capacity is by physically installing it on the board, yes. This design includes two RAM slots, allowing straightforward upgrades to 8 or 16GB memory, and it remains affordable. No, you can't simply add RAM externally, as no other connection method exists to match the required bandwidth for memory.
M
Martin69
09-22-2016, 10:58 PM #7

The only method to increase capacity is by physically installing it on the board, yes. This design includes two RAM slots, allowing straightforward upgrades to 8 or 16GB memory, and it remains affordable. No, you can't simply add RAM externally, as no other connection method exists to match the required bandwidth for memory.

N
Neonfluzzycat
Member
199
09-22-2016, 11:57 PM
#8
You can identify your motherboard model to determine the appropriate RAM size. Some systems use laptop-specific RAM, such as ITX form factors.
N
Neonfluzzycat
09-22-2016, 11:57 PM #8

You can identify your motherboard model to determine the appropriate RAM size. Some systems use laptop-specific RAM, such as ITX form factors.

L
Lewiswilson4
Member
148
10-05-2016, 09:09 PM
#9
You're aiming for DDR3 SO-DIMM RAM with speeds around 1066Mhz or 1333Mhz on an i3 2330m. Use CPU-Z to review the SPD details and ensure compatibility with your current setup. If you share a screenshot of that section, I can assist in choosing the right option. Keep in mind to reference the quote or @The Arbiter2267 for notifications. It's great you're revisiting this thread!
L
Lewiswilson4
10-05-2016, 09:09 PM #9

You're aiming for DDR3 SO-DIMM RAM with speeds around 1066Mhz or 1333Mhz on an i3 2330m. Use CPU-Z to review the SPD details and ensure compatibility with your current setup. If you share a screenshot of that section, I can assist in choosing the right option. Keep in mind to reference the quote or @The Arbiter2267 for notifications. It's great you're revisiting this thread!

_
_MrDay_
Member
215
10-06-2016, 01:50 AM
#10
32-bit Windows systems are limited to 4GB of RAM, adding more memory requires reinstalling with a 64-bit version.
_
_MrDay_
10-06-2016, 01:50 AM #10

32-bit Windows systems are limited to 4GB of RAM, adding more memory requires reinstalling with a 64-bit version.

Pages (2): 1 2 Next