The maximum usable pagefile for windows xp is 4gb
The maximum usable pagefile for windows vista 32bit, is also 4gb.
Now if you use XP or Vista 64 bit version, then the maximum is 32gb.
Normally the ideal pagefile is exactly 1.5 times the amount of ram set for both maximum and minimum. So 512mg of ram, 768 should be the max and min pagefile setting. But since the 32 bit operating system is limited to 4gb, you should set it to 4096 max and min.
No, there is no limit. However, if you have only 1 GB or memory, then you can only download as much as the memory allows. If you have 80 GB you will have just enough to download close to all apps applicable.
GB? You mean gay boys? OVER 9000
yes. The bad thing is that it only has 4 gb which is enough for you none serious gamers. But to be safe buy a 20 gb hard drive. 250 gb is alot. i have a 160 gb p3 and that still has a lot of gigs. hope thi helps
A High Definition Digital Versatile Disc or HD-DVD holds 15 GB per layer (a regular DVD holds 4.7 GB per layer)
bytes, megabytes and Gigabytes are the units for measuring the amout of data on a computer. 1024 megabytes are a gigabyte
there are 4 gigabytes in 4096 megabytes. hope this helped!
There are 4096 MB in 4 GB. Each Gigabyte has 1024 Megabytes in it, so 4x1024 is 4096.
1 Gigabyte = 1024 Megabytes so 4 Gigabytes = 4096 Megabytes
There are 1024 Mbps per GB so if you have 4096 Mbps, You divide the 4096 by 2 giving you 2048 Mbps/ 1 GB
Nu reușesc să resetez Page file ! Nu știu cum să introduc Numeric value for initial page file size. Am RAM instalat 2 GB, mulțumesc pentru ajutor!
i think its about 4000mb 4096- one GB equal to 1024 MB
There are four-thousand ninety-six megabites in four gigabytes of ram. This breaks down as one gigabyte equalling to one-thousand twenty-four megabytes times four.
there is 1024 mb in ONE GB! So 4096 MB!!!! i hope this helped http://www.superagames.weebly.com
We know , 1 GB = 1024 MB So, 4 GB = (4 x 1024) MB = 4096 MB
The typical laptop has around 4 Gigabytes (4096 MB) of RAM memory.
No, you cannot directly convert a 7-gigabyte (GB) file into a 4-gigabyte (GB) file without compressing or reducing the file's size.
2 GB