Free Memory and Available Memory in your Windows PC
Computer memory, more commonly referred to as RAM (Random Access Memory),
is the part of your machine that stores the files and programs that are
currently being or have recently been used by your PC. When your PC
needs to run a program, it loads it from your hard drive and stores it
temporarily in your RAM. Here it will remain until your computer is
finished with running the program, or the the PC is shut down.
Everything stored in RAM is lost when your PC turns off.
Memory Usage in Windows XP
In simpler terms, RAM is the workspace your PC uses to store and run
active programs and files. The larger your workspace, the more programs
it can handle and the faster your PC will run them. However, this can
become a bit confusing for users of Windows XP and onward. For these
users, Windows will display four categories of RAM under your memory
usage statistics: Free, Available, Cached, and Total.
Total memory is self-explanatory. This is the total amount of physical
memory that Windows has access to. Cached memory is the portion of your
RAM that has been used by the system recently. The two that you need to be concerned about are the two
which are the most confusing, available and free memory. To an everyday
user, these categories seem identical, however they measure two different types of memory.
Memory Usage in Windows 8
What is Free Memory?
While free memory and available memory both have similar sounding names,
free memory is exactly what it says it is. This is memory that is
currently unused by the system and contains no useful data at all. It is
free to be used by the system at any time. Simple as that.
What is Available Memory?
Here’s where things get a little bit tricky. Available memory contains
all the memory that is available for use by the system. While this
sounds extremely similar to free memory, it is actually a broader
category that includes both free memory and cached memory. That is why
your level of free and available memory will differ, regardless of their
similar names and functions.
Available memory plays an important role in later versions of windows. Starting with Windows 7,
Windows begins to pre-load files into available memory that it might
need in the future. The idea is that if some of these files are already
sitting in RAM, you will experience a noticeable increase in the speed
of your machine. If this memory is going to be idle anyway, why not use
it? If these files are not needed, they are easily swapped out of RAM in
order to make room for something else.
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