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To: Sean Brierley <seanb_us@xxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: What's the "dream machine" for running Frame?
From: Dov Isaacs <isaacs@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Tue, 03 Dec 2002 11:40:06 -0800
Cc: framers@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx, framers@xxxxxxxxx
In-Reply-To: <LISTMANAGER-25396-9305-2002.12.03-12.07.53--isaacs#adobe.com@lists.FrameUsers.com>
References: <LISTMANAGER-35290-9303-2002.12.03-11.54.09--seanb_us#yahoo.com@lists.FrameUsers.com>
Sender: owner-framers@xxxxxxxxx
It doesn't necessarily work out to 512MB for each of the applications. Windows 2000/XP itself has a fairly high threshold simply to run. 256MB is nice for simply booting and running applications that don't require much memory. Need more memory and applications running in such an environment will thrash like crazy to disk via the system's paging file or they will crash if there is not a large enough paging file. I see memory as important here because the user's customers are embedding graphics in FrameMaker documents, dramatically increasing FrameMaker's active memory requirements. - Dov At 12/3/2002 11:07 AM, Sean Brierley wrote: >Dov, why 512 MB RAM for FrameMaker? > >Why 512 MB RAM for Acrobat? > >Cheers, > >Sean > >--- Dov Isaacs <isaacs@adobe.com> wrote: >> Greg, >> >> Quite frankly, I think that some very simple things will >> fix your problems. >> >> In terms of HARDWARE, up your memory to at least 512 megabytes, >> preferably 1 gigabyte. Most "late" Pentium III 930+ mhz motherboards >> supported at least 1 gigabyte. This memory upgrade should be >> relatively inexpensive. ** To unsubscribe, send a message to majordomo@omsys.com ** ** with "unsubscribe framers" (no quotes) in the body. **