What are the advangtage to have accelerated reader on top of your flash ram

I bought my laptop thinking has made a good choice to have 8 GB of RAM with 24Gb player/acceleration because I wanted a 32 GB of RAM, but the max was 16 without acceleration flash drive

Was proud of him be until I had 3 VMS (virtual machines) running, and could not start a 4th one because my lapyop froze...

Seems that I have run out of memory!

Was that a good choice?

When that acceleration will flash drive kick?

My customized HP ENVY 17 t-j100 Quad Edition Notebook PC includes:

  • • Windows 8.1 64 Pro
  • • 4th generation Intel® Core™ i7-4800MQ processor
  • • Included 2-year warranty
  • • NVIDIA GeForce GT M 740 graphics with 2048 MB of video memory dedicated
  • • 17.3 inch diagonal Full HD LED-backlit Display (1920 x 1080) anti-glare Non touch
  • • 8GB DDR3 System Memory (2 Dimm)
  • • 2 TB 5400 RPM hard drive
  • • 24GB flash acceleration Cache hard drive
  • • Two batteries of Lithium-Ion 6-cell
  • • Blu - ray player & SuperMulti DVD burner
  • Backlit keyboard •
  • • HP TrueVision Webcam high definition with digital microphone built-in
  • • 2 x 2 802.11b/g/n WLAN and Bluetooth® [2 x 2]

Long story. The drive cache may hold all the contents of the memory, as well as some frequently used files and startup files. So more RAM more the cache drive must be to allow the Intel Quick Start, which is an immediate resumption of his sleep. HP thinks that they can get the content of 16 GB RAM and all the other files on a cache disk 24 concert so that they do not sell the player cache with 16 GB of RAM. I think that you can pass to 16 gigs if you don't care about the Intel Rapid Start, which is not the same as Intel Storge fast.

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Tags: Notebooks

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