The max is 3 gigabytes. The actual amount depends on how much of workout you are giving the computer . . .
2 gigs should cover most Office programs, and 3 gigs is not quite enough for certain of the graphics programs.
No, 64MB is the minimum for Windows XP. 128MB is recommended. 512MB runs it nicely.
Minimum requirements for Windows 7 Professional 64-bit is 2 gigabytes. Recommended would be 4 to 8 gigabytes.
Windows xp supports a maximum of 4 gigabytes of ram and 2 Terabytes of hard drive space
4 GB of memory is the maximum you can use in Windows XP, with only 3.5 GB of it seen by Windows.
If I recall, XP can utilize a maximum of 2Gigs of RAM. I do not think there is any limit to the disk space.
The least you need is 64M of ram but the recommended is 512M
You can compress your files into a spare harddrive to keep your memory ok
Windows XP doesn't directly determine what type of memory can be used; it depends on the motherboard. If the motherboard is compatible with Windows XP and the motherboard supports this memory module, then you can use it with Windows XP.
Required RAM memory is 64 MB. Recommended is 128 MB and the OS supports up to 4 GB.
This speaks of RAM. Required memory is 64 MB. Recommended is 128 MB and the OS supports up to 4 GB.
Unlike Windows 98, which ran on top of MS-DOS and had an external memory manager, Windows XP's memory manager is built into the kernel.
No. Windows XP has it's own kernel and memory management system.
XP - 256mb (1gb recommanded) 98 - 512mb (recommanded)
up to 2048GB