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#1 |
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8 gig vs 16 gig in a Mini 2012 2.3 i7?
Hey guys and gals,
Bought a Mini over the holdiays, and it's running stock 4gigs of RAM. I plan on doing some light photo editing and playing a Steam game here and there. So far everything is running nice and smooth, with an occasional beachball (spinning disc). I'm wondering if I should upgrade to 8 or 16 gigs of RAM. I've looked at some other threads, and was thinking of either grabbing http://www.newegg.ca/Product/Product...82E16820231631 or http://www.newegg.ca/Product/Product...82E16820231633 Is 16 excessive for my planned uses? Or is more RAM always better? Any help would be great!! |
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#2 | |
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http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16820104257 this has the fastest timings and is quicker then any other set of 8gb ram. as to if you need 16gb vs 8gb that is a hard call. think of it as a fast car that seats 4 (my kingston pick) if you have 4 passengers or less it is the better choice. think of the 16gb ram you picked as a mini van that seats 8 (your 16gb pick) if you have 5,6,7or 8 passengers the bigger one is better even if it goes slower it needs 1 trip so it is better. I built a lot of these minis I use the kingston plug n play 8gb set and I use this set. for 16gb http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16820239390 but I build machines to order. if you asked me to set up your machine I would say go for the 8gb plug n play. If you had money to burn I would say get this http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16820104317 this is the biggest and fastest of all. cost is 129 Last edited by philipma1957; Jan 22, 2013 at 10:58 AM. |
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#3 | |
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#4 |
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I'm usually one to say, get only what you need. With that said, memory prices keep dropping to the point where I just ordered 16GB (2x8GB) for $48 here in the US. An 8GB set (2x4GB) would only have saved me less than $20. For these kinds of prices, it's hard not to recommend just going to 16GB. Faster RAM will give you slightly better frame rates from your GPU since it shares the system RAM, but by slightly you are only looking at a couple of FPS. I'd get whatever is cheapest of 16GB (even if that means going 1333mhz instead of 1600mhz) and just be happy. You'll never need to upgrade the RAM in your Mini again (partly because you can't upgrade past 16GB!).
__________________
MBP 8,2 15" 2.2Ghz w/ 120GB SSD + 500GB MBA 4,2 13" 1.7Ghz w/ 128GB SSD Mac Mini 6,2 2.3ghz w/ 240GB SSD + 1TB Mac Pro 1,1 w/ 8 cores @ 2.66 w/ 240GB SSD |
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#5 |
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Is DDR3 1333mhz (PC3 10600) ram compatible with the 2012 mini?
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#6 |
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I bought the same 2012 mini, and decided to go with 16 figuring go for the most and not be concerned with upgrading at a later date.
I bought this: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...ls_o02_s00_i00 no problems at all with it. |
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#7 |
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#8 |
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Memory is so cheap now - just max it out and be done with it as some have said earlier in the thread.
__________________
2012 2.3GHz i7 Mini, 16GB RAM; 2009 2.93 GHz C2D iMac, 8GB RAM, 640GB HD, GT120 1.83 GHz CD Mini, 2GB RAM, 200GB HD; 800 MHz 17" G4 iMac, 1GB RAM, 120GB HD 32GB White iPhone 4S, 32GB White iPad2 |
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#9 |
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Thanks for the help!!
Followup question.... This stuff just went on sale http://www.canadacomputers.com/produ...item_id=056716 . Anyone know if it'll work? Most of the specs look about right..... just wanted to be extra sure before buying.... |
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#10 | |
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#11 |
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Confirmed, I had to bridge a few days' shipping wait with RAM from a 2011 Mini, and it worked fine in a 2012 Mini. Performance penalty is sure to have happened, but the difference in jumping to an SSD-only unit was so stark, I scarcely noticed.
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#12 |
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I would spend the extra $20 compared to the cheapest bargain RAM for the 16GB kit ( 8GB x 2 ) and buy direct from Crucial. They guarantee it will work with your Mac Mini late-2012 and it has a lifetime warranty. There should be no hassles, no worrying about the need for future upgrades and you will sleep better at night knowing you are covered with their guarantee.
http://www.crucial.com/upgrade/Apple...-upgrades.html Last edited by SoCalReviews; Jan 23, 2013 at 07:49 PM. |
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#13 |
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Look at it this way:
If you get 16GB you'll be satisfied for the life of your machine and have a on your face. Your mini will also thank you.If you get 8GB and save some money now, you'll find yourself upgrading to 16GB a year or two from now and wishing you had bought 16gb from the start because now you are spending $$ and also stuck with 8GB ram that you can't use and no one will buy because they can get brand new ram cheap from a store. Go for 16GB. No regrets. It's what I did. |
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#14 |
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I put 16gb in my new mini. To me, the tiny price difference between 8 and 16 made it a no brainer. 16gb will be good for the life of the mini.
__________________
Mac Mini (Late 2012), i7 2.6, Fusion Drive, 16Gb Time Capsule, 2TB iPad 3, 32Gb, Wifi+4G iPhone 4S 16Gb TV (Gen3) iPod Nano (Gen1) 2Gb
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#15 |
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I put 16 gigs in my 2.3ghz quad i7 mini and it runs like a champ. I'm sure my 840 pro has a little to do with that as well but one thing I did notice when going from 4 gig to 16, Mountain Lion used almost 3gigs to run. Now it averages out that I have 13.5gig free when sitting on desktop. Sometimes 14 or 14.25.
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#16 |
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If I could put 32GB or 64GB RAM in my mid-2011 Mini I would do it. I knew that the 2GB it came with was ridiculously anemic for basic needs. I originally purchased the 8GB kit. I thought that would be enough to run multiple Windows VMs but that same week after I installed it noticed in the system monitor the page outs and indications that I was running out of RAM memory so I ordered 16GB kit ( 8GB x 2 ) and swapped it out and I haven't looked back. The almost new 8GB (4GB x 2) Crucial kit is still sitting in it's original box in my desk drawer along with the stock 2GB. Now I also wish I had put a 1TB hard drive in place of the stock 500GB drive before I loaded it up with programs. I know I can convert it but it's more of a hassle now than it would have been before. The rule of thumb is if you can afford it...max out your system hardware...memory, drives, etc.. It's better to help future proof your system for the nine lives of the machine...OS X 10.9 Lynx, 10.10 Ocelot, 10.11 (Cougar?).
Last edited by SoCalReviews; Jan 24, 2013 at 03:20 AM. |
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#17 |
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bought mini late 2012.. installed everything no problems at all (my old backups will not work because of special osx requirement- but data is all available just cannot boot)
two days late today upgraded with crucial to 16gb.. no issues. memory, memory, memory get what you can afford... slows down disc access, cooler machine, faster response, no brainer... get as much as you can afford.... cheers elo |
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#18 |
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#19 |
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What are you guys running that takes more than 8GB of RAM?
I'm all for "more is better", but in the 1.5 years I've had my mini, I don't recall ever using more than 7GB, even with the heaviest loads I can muster. |
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#20 |
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8gb is probably enough but cost is minimal for the extra memory... the extra memory will mean less page out page in, fewer disc io as a whole, this means less heat, etc...etc. just learned thru the years ,including the dark days in business, that one can never have enough memory.
cheers elo |
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#21 |
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Well speaking for myself I often have a Win7 VM open (that has 6GB dedicated) running CorelDraw!, Photoshop and Illustrator in the OSX side with iTunes playing and several browsers and textmate. All this switches nice and fast with 16GB and thats the way I like to work.
I also have the samba, plex and AirVideo servers running and occasionally I will have handbrake transcoding in the background my i7 2.3 works for its living
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"When two tribes go to war; ONE is all that you can score!"
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#22 | |
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Photoshop (80-200MB, deep layered files) InDesign Lightroom Wunderlist iOS Simulator On the job Safari Chrome Coda2 Sparrow Spotify VM Ware Additional menu items running: Dropbox iStat Menus Little Ipsum It can get pretty busy on my machine at any point in time, why worry?
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Mens sana in corpore sano. |
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#23 |
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I run at least two VM's at all times on my Mac's since I play "helpdesk" for several web apps on the weekends. I set asside usually at least 2GB of RAM for each VM so that's at least 4GB right there. Take out the 768MB (so almost 1GB) that goes to VRAM, that means I'm down 5GB. If I only had 3GB in my computer I would hardly be able to get anything done.
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MBP 8,2 15" 2.2Ghz w/ 120GB SSD + 500GB MBA 4,2 13" 1.7Ghz w/ 128GB SSD Mac Mini 6,2 2.3ghz w/ 240GB SSD + 1TB Mac Pro 1,1 w/ 8 cores @ 2.66 w/ 240GB SSD |
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#24 | |
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#25 |
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RAM is cheap
Go 16G. It will speed it up too.
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on your face. Your mini will also thank you.
Mac Mini (Late 2012), i7 2.6, Fusion Drive, 16Gb
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