Has anyone ever seen one this large?
that's a whole gig of memory leak, after 2 hours of play...
that's a whole gig of memory leak, after 2 hours of play...
yes i normally get those as well. however it was really surprising to see this and thought id' share.KingSnake wrote:
I get small ones, 200 mb ones. but nothing that bad.
kessel! wrote:
what is memory leak.
Last edited by i3igpete (2006-07-30 19:13:33)
There are programs such as Rambooster that you can use to "defrag" your memory to free up current unused but reserved portions, but they are to be used with caution.luckeydogg wrote:
In computer science, a memory leak is a particular kind of unintentional memory consumption by a computer program where the program fails to release memory when no longer needed. The term is meant as a humorous misnomer, since memory is not physically lost from the computer, but rather becomes claimed but ignored due to program logic flaws.
You are a communist, the RAM on the PC you are using belongs to everyone...K8Kommunist wrote:
Has anyone ever seen one this large?
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v147/ … ryleak.jpg
that's a whole gig of memory leak, after 2 hours of play...
Whats the dangers of using rambooster?unnamednewbie13 wrote:
There are programs such as Rambooster that you can use to "defrag" your memory to free up current unused but reserved portions, but they are to be used with caution.luckeydogg wrote:
In computer science, a memory leak is a particular kind of unintentional memory consumption by a computer program where the program fails to release memory when no longer needed. The term is meant as a humorous misnomer, since memory is not physically lost from the computer, but rather becomes claimed but ignored due to program logic flaws.
None physical. But you may be required to reboot if you try to set the desired amount of freed memory too high.Maj.Do wrote:
Whats the dangers of using rambooster?unnamednewbie13 wrote:
There are programs such as Rambooster that you can use to "defrag" your memory to free up current unused but reserved portions, but they are to be used with caution.luckeydogg wrote:
In computer science, a memory leak is a particular kind of unintentional memory consumption by a computer program where the program fails to release memory when no longer needed. The term is meant as a humorous misnomer, since memory is not physically lost from the computer, but rather becomes claimed but ignored due to program logic flaws.