NO
i think the speed of the computer will increase
Actually it is quite the opposite. The more RAM you have the more speed at which data can be transferred to the RAM. An example is if you have 512 Mb of RAM then 512 Mb of data will be transferred to the RAM at a time, but if you upgrade it to 1 GB of RAM then 1 GB of data will be transferred to the RAM at a time verses the 512 Mb. So the speed at which the RAM stores data will increase if the size of the RAM is increased. I hope this answers your question.
The processor size or speed does not determine how much RAM your system needs. Generally speaking, the newer the system, the more RAM you can add. The amount of RAM slots on a motherboard and the motherboard's own subsystem (the BIOS) will determine how much RAM you can add to a particular motherboard.
The way you increase the size of RAM is to replace the RAM cards in your computer with some that have more space on them. There is no way to make a 1GB RAM card 2GB without replacing it.
Depends, get ddr3 1333mhz.
yes
yes the bit system is only for drivers or software's working but ram actually increase the speed of processing and huge amount of data load a time on ram so u can increase your ram as you want
yes the bit system is only for drivers or software's working but ram actually increase the speed of processing and huge amount of data load a time on ram so u can increase your ram as you want
Basically for the same reason that cache itself helps increase the speed. If there is more cache memory, the computer will have more information readily available, and there will be less cases where the information CAN'T be found in cache, and the CPU needs to access actual RAM, which is slower (or whatever other source of data the cache is supposed to speed up).
It is impossible for "the RAM size to be higher than the processor speed." They are measured in totally different units, with no correlation between the two.
only increasing the RAM will not improve the Performance of the PC. Increasing the Ram will help the system with little more space for opening the temporary files in the Memory. This improves the Stability & not the Speed. Performance is something based on the BUS speed of Processor, Ram, Motherboard & Hard Disk. (Performance is a combination of all the above.)
If you have on-board video (not a separate video card) then you may be able to increase the allocated ram in the BIOS setup.