If I have 16 GB of RAM and it is an Intel Xeon.ġ6GB really isn't very much once you start talking installing software on ramdisks. I don't have an SSD and my hard drive is killing my boot time.
So can I just allocate some of my ram to work as if it were an SSD and install windows and vital software on it, to gain super fast speed. The big problem here is that ramdisks are volatile. So even if you can get windows to run from a ramdrive and even if you have enough memory to run something that's not a crazy stripped down install, every time you do a cold boot you would have to re-copy stuff from your hard drive to the ram drive.
Or is it more trouble then its worth and would be better off just buying an SSD? If your goal is to reduce boot times that renders ramdrives fairly pointless. Voltage fluctuates while a PSU is running, you can verify this in the Bios check the. Primocache Kernel Component Is Not Running Update To The But this isnt a new thing, it happens when Microsoft issues a major update to the OS.
Yes you would be much better off just buying a SSD. The way I understand it, the alternator will pulse, for example, twice the voltage at 50 duty cycle to equal the correct voltageOn PSUs, voltage is commonly set intentionally high so that the voltage droop under load stays within spec.