Most Windows 7 PCs max out memory
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Most Windows 7 systems consume nearly all RAM; less than half of XP PCs do
By Gregg Keizer | Framingham | Thursday, 18 February, 2010 | 4 Comments
Most Windows 7 PCs max out their memory, resulting in performance bottlenecks, a researcher said today.
Citing data from Devil Mountain Software's community-based Exo.performance.network (XPnet), Craig Barth, the company's chief technology officer, said that new metrics reveal an unsettling trend. On average, 86 percent of Windows 7 machines in the XPnet pool are regularly consuming 90 percent-95 percent of their available RAM, resulting in slow-downs as the systems were forced to increasingly turn to disk-based virtual memory to handle tasks.
Correction and apology: All is not as it appears in this article
The 86 percent mark for Windows 7 is more than twice the average number of Windows XP machines that run at the memory "saturation" point, said Barth. The most recent snapshot of XPnet's 23,000-plus PCs — taken yesterday — pegs only 40 percent of XP systems as running low on memory.
"The vast majority of Windows 7 machines over the last several months are very heavily-memory saturated," said Barth today. "From a performance standpoint, that has an immediate impact on the machine."
The low-memory condition of most Windows 7 PCs is even more notable considering the amount of RAM in Windows 7 systems: According to XPnet's polling, Windows 7 PCs sport an average of 3.3GB of memory, compared to 1.7GB in the average Windows XP computer. (Machines running Windows Vista contain an average of 2.7GB.)
"Windows 7 machines have almost twice as much memory to work with," said Barth, "but the numbers show just how much larger and more complex Windows 7 is than XP."
Barth acknowledged that XPnet's data couldn't determine whether the memory usage was by the operating system itself, or an increased number of applications, but said that Devil Mountain would start working on finding which is the dominant factor in increased memory use.
Other data that Devil Mountain collates as part of a new metric dubbed "Windows Composite Performance Index" (WCPI) quantifies peak processor workload and I/O performance. Both of those measurements are also higher for Windows 7 systems than for XP machines. While 85 percent of the former are running at peak I/O loads, only 36 percent of the latter do; the numbers for CPU workload are closer, as 44 percent of Windows 7 computers are running a computational backlog that delays processing tasks, compared to 36 percent of the XP systems.
"This is alarming," Barth said of Windows 7 machines' resource consumption. "For the OS to be pushing the hardware limits this quickly is amazing. Windows 7 is not the lean, mean version of Vista that you may think it is."
Long-time computer users are more familiar with the opposite: that hardware stays ahead of operating system requirements. "On current-generation hardware right out of the gate, Windows 7 is maxing out the resources. The old trend just isn't the case anymore. Now, everything that Intel giveth, Microsoft taketh away," Barth said.
"I think this is something that everyone in their gut knew, but now we have data," said Barth. "The metrics don't lie."
Users who want to compare their computers to the current WCPI numbers can do so by registering with XPnet and then installing the DMS Clarity Tracker Agent from Devil Mountain's site.
Comments
What a load of tosh!
Just because it's using a lot of memory doesn't mean it's regulalry paging out to the HD.
Posted by Anonymous at 8:40:03 on February 22, 2010
Posted by Anonymous at 8:40:03 on February 22, 2010
Scaremongers Anonymous
What an absolute load of bollocks! I have been using WIndows 7 since its beta days and support a number of WIndows 7 machines, typically with either 2GB or 4GB of memory. From what I've seen, typical operation (Word Processing, a browser session or two, email, and a LOB application) will cause Windows to use around 40% of RAM.
Posted by Anonymous at 15:01:44 on February 19, 2010
Posted by Anonymous at 15:01:44 on February 19, 2010
SuperFetch 2
While I was reading the article I was thinking "Where are the bottlenecks?" The system uses a lot of memory making things work fast for the user. In older systems, a max out of memory would have caused the system to start using the pagefile (disk based virtual memory which is much slower then RAM). But Windows 7 will free up RAM from SuperFetch when the RAM is required by the operating system or applications. The previous poster is right. What would be the point of having 80% of your RAM doing nothing?
See this article on SuperFetch
Posted by www.sonet.co.nz at 19:32:49 on February 18, 2010
See this article on SuperFetch
Posted by www.sonet.co.nz at 19:32:49 on February 18, 2010
SuperFetch
Get thee to an internet search engine immediately and have a read up on something called SuperFetch.
It's *supposed* to use lots of RAM. SuperFetch preloads commonly used program files based on individual user usage patterns, so your whole system runs faster. No point having 80% of you RAM sitting there idle is there?
It's not new either, Vista used SuperFetch too. I'd have thought both the reporter and the research company would have known this.
Posted by Anonymous at 15:08:19 on February 18, 2010
It's *supposed* to use lots of RAM. SuperFetch preloads commonly used program files based on individual user usage patterns, so your whole system runs faster. No point having 80% of you RAM sitting there idle is there?
It's not new either, Vista used SuperFetch too. I'd have thought both the reporter and the research company would have known this.
Posted by Anonymous at 15:08:19 on February 18, 2010
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