Why is everyone saying 8GB is pointless just because they don't need it?
I could spend it on more HD space, but i have loads. I have an 8800GT which flies through everything i play, and i already dont have time to play the games i have. 
I'm not just populating the slots because i can.
I've already said i run into the 4GB wall
I'm pretty sure you are.
What application?
I've had 8Gb of PC8000 RAM in a stressed machine running pretty much every application I can lay my hands on, including 8 copies of Virtual PC, and it was no faster than 4Gb. I promise you, you're only looking at it because it looks cheap. If it was £500 to upgrade you would not be considering it.
What about an 8Gb SLC SATA SSD for £85 instead? That will actually speed your system up if you use it for your OS drive.

Well thankyou for calling me a liar!
If you'de read the thread i've already stated what application.
If it was £500 i wouldn't be looking at it, so whats your point? Because it's cheap it's a worthless upgrade?
Do i have to video my computer running into the 4GB wall and slowing down as it writes to the HD to persuade you or something? Sure i could put up with it being slightly slower when this happens, but then i may aswell put up with a slower CPU, slower hardrive.. slower graphics card..
The ram is the best way to speed up Photoshop. I could put in a Raid0 scratchdisk, but not only would it be slower, it would be more expensive.
My questions were the implementation of 8GB of ram, and what it would do to my motherboard. It seems it wouldn't do a great deal to my motherboard, apart from maybe having to up the NB volts with some extra cooling. So AFAIC, thread has served it purpose, job done![]()
You've no idea what I do with the RAM, so how can you say it's pointless? I think you're assuming I do the same things with my machine that you do with yours - and I obviously don't.Because in the real world, 8Gb is pointless. The £60-£110 you'll spend on a 4Gb upgrade will buy a faster/bigger hard drive, better graphics card or 2-4 new games.
The truth is that all you're doing is populating slots because you can. Keep your cash in the bank for when a proper upgrade comes out. And proper upgrades are coming out all the time.
You've no idea what I do with the RAM, so how can you say it's pointless? I think you're assuming I do the same things with my machine that you do with yours - and I obviously don't.
I didn't call you a liar, if I wanted to call you a liar I'd have used the word. What I think you are is mistaken. Mistaken in your belief that an extra 4Gb of RAM will speed up your system.
You said something about Photo-ee-things, which isn't an application that I'm aware of.
Almost. Just being cheap doesn't make it worthless, but even though people who have TRIED IT tell you it's pointless you're still prepared to do it because you're convinced it's RAM. It's worthless because it's not worth doing. Pointless.
If it's photoshop then it doesn't speed up under 64 bit Vista with 8Gb RAM over 4Gb RAM. I have tested this to death and the only way I could get ANY performance improvement was to run a DDR RAM iDrive or with an SSD as OS disk.

I disagree.
I answered that question, as I suspect I'm one of the very few people to have the exact same combination, and to have actually tested it with 8Gb of GeIL RAM. You don't need to adjust anything if you're already running 2 sticks. Just put the extra 2 sticks in and it'll be fine.
Your self-denial on this is understandable, as you've convinced yourself that your machine only writes to disk because it's run out of RAM. OK. Try it, expand your RAM by all means. And if you open up to the concept of taking advice from someone who has experience of what you are trying to do, then you might actually get the point. Some of us are actually trying to help by advising, as well as answer yes/no questions.
I'm the last person to beat anyone over the head for spending money on an upgrade, but I would just say I've actually tried it, and it didn't help with Photoshop manipulation speeds for me.

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Hi WJA. I'm a software developer and do all my work these days inside of virtual machines. Some projects require multiple machines, and I often need to dip and it out of several differnt projects during the day, so I keep a lot of VMs open. When it starts swapping to disk things really grind to a halt. 8GB gives me much more headroom.OK, I'll bite - what do you do with yours? I've tested most applications with 8Gb and 16Gb and I only see a marked improvement in scaleability with servers (especially Citrix type applications). In single-user/multiple applications open at the same time use, I really find it hard to shave even a few seconds off benchmarks. Photoshop on the PC is infamously limited to 3Gb anyway, so what's faster for you?
I'm genuinely interested on how to make CS3 run as quick as possible. I could RAID0 up two more 250Gb drives for about £20 more, you think this would give a larger performance boost than 4GB more ram? (Unfortunately raptor raid is off the charts due to cost)
We're talking from fully off to fully booted in around 14 seconds. Vista is only scoring me a 1.0 on my HDD score though which just goes to show how stupid that is.You've no idea what I do with the RAM, so how can you say it's pointless? I think you're assuming I do the same things with my machine that you do with yours - and I obviously don't.
I reckon 32Gb is plenty for the OS and applications. OK - You could argue that £10/Gigabyte is way too much to pay, but I suspect that it's the only way I'll really speed up CS3.