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#1 |
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Suitable RAM Amount for iMac
Hi, all
Just seeking the forums expert advice on choosing the right ram amount before i pull the trigger on a 21.5 iMac 2.7GHZ 1TB Fusion. Typical work pattern would be work applications through the safari browser,itunes,word/excel and outlook only. I cannot see any change of this for the next few years. My question is would the stock 8GB suffice for the next 3-4 years with the above usage pattern or should i pay the apple tax of $220 AUD and upgrade to 16GB.(yes i know i have to upgrade at purchase) My only concern is OSX and the thought that it will become more memory hungry in the future. My thoughts are just play it safe and buy the base 27" with Fusion drive so i have the option of putting my 2012 MBP 13' DDR3 1600 memory in it later.( i have already upgraded from 4GB to 8GB so i have a spare 4GB(apple ram) sitting around Any thoughts ladies and gentlemen Last edited by buysp; Feb 12, 2013 at 10:32 PM. Reason: Typo |
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#2 |
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8GB is plenty for what you do. 4GB is plenty for what you do. If you really wanna future proof go the i7/27 inch route
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#3 |
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Thanks for your reply jnowakphoto but i'm under the impression that a ivy bridge i5 is all good for the next 3-4 years. If i was a heavy cpu user than it would be a differen't story. (i could be wrong!)
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#4 | |
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Quote:
__________________
27" iMac i5, 24 GB RAM; MBA 11.6" 1.4GHz 4GB RAM 128GB SSD; Multiple HP Printers; Lacie Quadra D2 external HDs; 4S iPhone; Nikon DLSR |
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#5 |
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Sorry. I meant to say i5/27 inch route with a base 8gb setup. You can always add more later yourself. And for $200 you'll make it a 32gb machine not 16.
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#6 | |
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Cheers Paul |
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#7 | |
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__________________
Time And Tide Wait For No Man
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#8 | |
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So channel 1 is 4GB + 2GB and repeat the same for channel 2! Cheers Paul |
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#9 | |
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So yeah, just get the one with 8 GB and be done with it. |
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#10 |
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mate check from activity monitor after a long day of usage if you had any pages out (really doubt you will have any).
In case you do not have pages out you are happy with your amount of memory and if your needs will change in 3 years time you can always pay someone (or DIY) to open the computer and plug some more memory...! |
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#11 | |
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I have decided to go down the 27" route so more importantly will the 4GB stock apple memory (that i have taken out) be compatable with the late 2012 iMac. They are both 1600mhz? Cheers Paul Last edited by buysp; Feb 13, 2013 at 09:22 PM. Reason: Typo |
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#12 |
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I think I have raised this question before and the anwer was yes they are compatible althoug if you computer usage will not change in the future it will stay idle there unused.
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#13 |
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#14 |
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I decided to max out my 27" and got the i7 with 3TB fusion and bought 32GB of RAM. While the processor and HDD might have been a good choice, the 32GB was absolutely overkill.
Having got the imac up and running, I thought I'd test it with ripping a bluray, whilst encoding another bluray using handbrake and playing itunes, copying files off a server, using safari, messenger, mail, importing into iPhoto and a using a massive spreadsheet in excel...checked activity monitor and it was barely using 6-7GB. I don't regret the purchase - it wasn't that expensive and I plan to have the imac for at least 3-5 years and RAM requirements will increase over that time. |
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