Your IT Go-To Guy Serving the South Shore

Monkeywrench Consulting & Media provides computer support services to small businesses and home computer users.

If I can be of service to you, please contact me:

Allen Freeman
857-526-6768
allen@MonkeywrenchConsulting.com
computer.MonkeywrenchConsulting.com

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Room To Think

The laptop I use most for everyday computing -- email, bookkeeping, maintaining my calendar, etc -- is a Dell laptop I purchased way back in 2003. It is certainly starting to show it's age. The battery barely holds a charge anymore and I use it almost exclusively tethered to an electrical outlet. The huge 30GB hard drive doesn't seem nearly so large anymore. And lately it has been getting so bogged down as to be nearly unusable. Of course, I did all the things I do to my clients' computers when they complain of a slow machine. I cleaned out the registry, scanned for viruses and malware, made sure the hard drive wasn't running out of space, looked at the processes that were running at start-up. All of that helped a little, but just a little. No matter what I did, the page file was always full and the computer spent a huge amount of time paging to the hard drive.

This makes sense, since the computer had only 512KB of RAM. That was a normal configuration back in 2003, and developers wrote software with those kinds of limits in mind. But in 2010, the average computer, and thus the "design standard" for software development, assumes a lot more RAM.

My first thought was to simply replace my laptop. I've certainly gotten a full life cycle from it, and it owes me nothing. And it sure would be nice to get my hands on a new Windows 7 PC with all the latest bells and whistles. But like everyone else I am pinching pennies a bit nowadays, so I decided to take another tack, and upgrade the RAM in my laptop. I replaced the two 256k sticks with 2 1GB sticks, at a cost of about $65. Wow, what a difference! With all that memory the computer doesn't have to go page to the hard drive nearly as often, and the performance is night-and-day improved. It boots faster. Applications load and run faster. Using the laptop is no longer an exercise in frustration.

I still want that new Win7 PC, but I'll wait a while for that. Meanwhile, I've gotten a year or two more of service out of my existing laptop, for a relatively small investment.