64 Mb is half of 128 Mb. If you are storing information you can onlu store half as much. If you are loading a program into RAM that is close to ar greater than what is available you will need to repetedly unload part to a hard drive and load another part. This tkes time and makes the computer react very slowly.
The 128mb memory is larger because RAM is a type of memory and obviously 128 is more than 64.
Yes.
Then you should have twice as much RAM. But you still have too little for Windows Vista...
It requires at least 64MB of ram, but 128MB is recommended. You also need at least a 1.5 GB hard-drive.
You have probably not inserted the memory module correctly. Remove it and attempt to reinstall it. Try switching the memory module's locations. If the same module fails in both slots, it is likely defective.
No. Windows XP Professional requires at least 128MB of RAM. (Official claims are that it will run on 64MB, but some features won't be available and performance will be near-unusable.)
No, memory works by just doubling and doubling, so for example memory sizes would be: 1MB, 2MB, 4MB, 8MB, 16MB, 32MB, 64MB, 128MB, 256MB, 512MB, 1GB (1024MB) I hope this helps.
It depends on the SD card you're using, as well as the game size. Micro SD cards can range from 1GB - 4GB. Most NDS files are 128MB so that is about 7-8 games per GB. However some NDS games are larger and are 256 MB whil others can be 64MB.
In principle, you could 896 MB, however you'll almost certainly have to remove the 128MB memory and replace it (probably with two 512MB). If this is what I think it is, namely a blue and white Apple Power Macintosh G3, the computer had two 64MB DIMMs in it when it shipped. You have three options: Install two 256MB DIMMs (always PC133--the book says PC100, but PC133 is compatible and it's all you can get now anyway) alongside the 64MB DIMMs to have 640MB RAM. Remove one 64MB DIMM and install three 256MB DIMMs for 896MB. Remove both 64MB DIMMs and install four 256MB DIMMs for 1GB.
Depending on what the bios has set the memory to be used from the onboard graphics, you can tell it to use more ram, ie change it from 64 - 128mb. But in doing this, your detracting from the physical ram. Eg you have 256mb ram at the moment, using the onboard graphics, (64mb), means you only have 192Mb, which is nothing in todays world of computing. So if you tell it to use 128mb, you will only have 128mb ram. :( The best thing to do, imo, is to purchase a dedicated graphics card for this machine. With it being a media centre pc, I would opt for the largest graphics card you could afford. Nothing less than a 256mb would be my preferred option. Hope this helps be safe Nige Cadishead Computers
check the memory clock speed. if the 128mb has 100MHz and the 64mb has 133MHz then they will not work together.
Minimum of 650 MHz Processor Speed Minimum of 64MB of RAM (128MB recommended) Minimum of 125MB of free hard drive space CD-ROM or DVD drive Win98/ME/2000/XP