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.
NO
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.
"mbs" is speed, not RAM size.
between physical size,solid slate,speed,capacity
The full size of your RAM is unchanged, it's just that now 5 GB is being used as a program called "ramdisk" Check for "free" RAM to see the decrease.
The procie varies depending on the locale and size of the memory as well as its speed.
Max it out!!! The CPU can only be as fast as it's cache size and than it's memory.
change its settings to either quality or performance, increase or decrease screen size, decrease graphical quality of games, get more ram, get updates, get hardware
DDR RAM doubles its speed by using both the rising and falling edge of the clock signal. The advantage of DDR and QDR signaling is that the clock rate does not have to be increased. So the integrity of the signal is not compromised since the throughput can be increased without increasing the clock rate.
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.
if you are using big programs then yes so overall yes
Most likely a failed TPS.