F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop The RAM consumption appears excessive compared to its actual value

The RAM consumption appears excessive compared to its actual value

The RAM consumption appears excessive compared to its actual value

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GoMigs
Senior Member
614
09-04-2016, 11:16 PM
#1
You're experiencing unusual memory behavior with your system. It seems there might be a mismatch between what the RAM sticks show and what Windows reports. The high usage even when only a small portion is active could indicate a driver issue, faulty stick, or a conflict in how the OS manages memory. Checking the RAM stick placement is good, but next steps could involve testing different drivers, updating your system, or using tools like MemTest86 to verify hardware health.
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GoMigs
09-04-2016, 11:16 PM #1

You're experiencing unusual memory behavior with your system. It seems there might be a mismatch between what the RAM sticks show and what Windows reports. The high usage even when only a small portion is active could indicate a driver issue, faulty stick, or a conflict in how the OS manages memory. Checking the RAM stick placement is good, but next steps could involve testing different drivers, updating your system, or using tools like MemTest86 to verify hardware health.

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xRawzx
Member
177
09-09-2016, 06:59 AM
#2
No, your system is not using an iGPU-enabled CPU without a dedicated GPU.
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xRawzx
09-09-2016, 06:59 AM #2

No, your system is not using an iGPU-enabled CPU without a dedicated GPU.

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Lavissa
Junior Member
5
09-11-2016, 07:12 AM
#3
Navigate to the details section and review the program's usage there, as there might be additional background information not visible in the summary.
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Lavissa
09-11-2016, 07:12 AM #3

Navigate to the details section and review the program's usage there, as there might be additional background information not visible in the summary.

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Chiller9592
Senior Member
670
09-17-2016, 02:01 PM
#4
It’s misleading. It doesn’t lie, but it doesn’t tell the whole story. The task manager displays each process’s usage, but the percentage reflects what’s allocated, not actual consumption. If a task uses only 500MB out of 1GB, it still shows 500MB—yet the percentage calculation uses the full 1GB. This inconsistency is confusing and frustrating, especially when trying to gauge if you’re near the page file or facing other issues. The math in Task Manager doesn’t match reality, making it hard to trust the numbers. It’s like having a large memory but only using a tiny fraction—still, the system can’t confirm it.
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Chiller9592
09-17-2016, 02:01 PM #4

It’s misleading. It doesn’t lie, but it doesn’t tell the whole story. The task manager displays each process’s usage, but the percentage reflects what’s allocated, not actual consumption. If a task uses only 500MB out of 1GB, it still shows 500MB—yet the percentage calculation uses the full 1GB. This inconsistency is confusing and frustrating, especially when trying to gauge if you’re near the page file or facing other issues. The math in Task Manager doesn’t match reality, making it hard to trust the numbers. It’s like having a large memory but only using a tiny fraction—still, the system can’t confirm it.

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pixel2015
Member
50
09-17-2016, 05:47 PM
#5
The same approach applies to Windows 11, which is considered the 15th major release of Windows. All versions of Windows 10 are grouped together under a single major number. If you need more detail, there were around 40 sub-variants as of October 23.
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pixel2015
09-17-2016, 05:47 PM #5

The same approach applies to Windows 11, which is considered the 15th major release of Windows. All versions of Windows 10 are grouped together under a single major number. If you need more detail, there were around 40 sub-variants as of October 23.