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I noticed last night my ram had defaulted back to 1333mhz and a 15 latency. I set them back to 1600mhz and a 9 latency and saw an immediate improvement.

I’m running a 2TB 7200rpm hard drive and want to upgrade to an ssd I’m currently getting 96 read and write is 83.

The ssd I’m looking at is:

The 860 EVO performs at sequential read speeds up to 550 MB/s* with Intelligent TurboWrite technology, and sequential write speeds up to 520 MB/s. The TurboWrite buffer size* is upgraded from 12 GB to 78 GB.

Would this make a difference in game play?

I noticed last night my ram had defaulted back to 1333mhz and a 15 latency. I set them back to 1600mhz and a 9 latency and saw an immediate improvement. I’m running a 2TB 7200rpm hard drive and want to upgrade to an ssd I’m currently getting 96 read and write is 83. The ssd I’m looking at is: The 860 EVO performs at sequential read speeds up to 550 MB/s* with Intelligent TurboWrite technology, and sequential write speeds up to 520 MB/s. The TurboWrite buffer size* is upgraded from 12 GB to 78 GB. Would this make a difference in game play?

(post is archived)

[–] 0 pt (edited )

Buffer space usage is typically used from a storage perspective as a space to store the most frequently accessed files so they are resident in the buffer rather than making a second lookup to the file allocation tables.

So what you would be storing there would be the most used files from whatever you are reading and writing most often.

Long productive day of coding? That entire code base that gets called every time you change something or compile is going to be in there if it fits.

Gaming.. its going to be the texture packs or DLLs most used to make that game work.

Page size -- From old school windows days the recommendation was twice the system ram. this becomes a file written to disk that the OS can access specifically for situations where more ram was needed and wasn't available.

I would recommend sticking with that. But I am not a modern windows expert and gave up windows early into Win 7.

Edit.. I a word

[–] 0 pt

I had to update to windows ten from seven since some programs stopped working. Is page file the same as vram? And can vram be set manually also?

page file is the same as swap on linux not sure on the vram term personally, if it's virtual ram it sounds like swap space. Ram is really cheap now or was recently and got me enough for a long time not being under the required for a few years with 64GB's in my new build.