Showing posts with label size. Show all posts
Showing posts with label size. Show all posts
Sunday, October 30, 2016
How to find your computers RAM speed type and size
How to find your computers RAM speed type and size
Need to find out your systems details? Heres our guide on how to find out the size, type and speed of your PC or Macs RAM.
More of us use computers than ever before, and yet the ins and outs of hardware specifications remain a confusing minefield to many.
One of the trickiest areas to make sense of can be your computers RAM. If youre feeling overwhelmed by trying to decode what your computers stats actually mean, heres our guide on how to find out your RAM speed, size, type and more.
By far the simplest method of finding out the details of your computers internal workings is by using Windows built-in diagnostics.
If you open the Control Panel and navigate to System and Security, under the system subheading, you should see a link called View amount of RAM and processor speed.
Clicking on this will bring up some basic specifications for your computer such as memory size, OS type, and processor model and speed.
However, it wont give you any of the more detailed figures, such as the speed of your RAM. If youre looking for this data, your best bet is to use one of the many third-party programs that can scan your PC to provide you with all the relevant information.
Our favourite is CPUIDs CPU-Z software (downloadable for free here), with a small install size and a comprehensive battery of information. Once you install the program, itll perform a quick system scan, and then display all your PCs information, organised into handy tabs for your convenience.
Navigate to the memory tab, and itll tell you how many memory slots your PC has, what type (DDR, DDR2, DDR3, etc) and size (in GB) your memory is, and real-time information on the frequency its running at. It also contains a detailed breakdown of your memorys latency and clock speeds, should you require it.
This makes it especially handy for working out whether your PC is compatible with upgrade components, or powerful enough to run the latest games.
As with everything Apple, the process for finding basic details about your hardware is super-simple: just click the Apple logo, and go to About This Mac.
An info box will pop up with your Macs processors name and speed, and the memory size, type and speed.

One of the trickiest areas to make sense of can be your computers RAM. If youre feeling overwhelmed by trying to decode what your computers stats actually mean, heres our guide on how to find out your RAM speed, size, type and more.
How to find out your RAM speed, size and type: PC
Step 1
If you open the Control Panel and navigate to System and Security, under the system subheading, you should see a link called View amount of RAM and processor speed.
Step 2
Our favourite is CPUIDs CPU-Z software (downloadable for free here), with a small install size and a comprehensive battery of information. Once you install the program, itll perform a quick system scan, and then display all your PCs information, organised into handy tabs for your convenience.
Step 3
Step 4
As an additional bonus, the software can provide motherboard, BIOS and graphics card info, not to mention a full breakdown of your processors name, model, number of cores, speed and cache sizes, acting as a one-stop shop for tech specs.How to find out your RAM speed, size and type: Mac
Step 1
An info box will pop up with your Macs processors name and speed, and the memory size, type and speed.
Step 2
Should you be after the more in-depth specs, a full technical breakdown is available by clicking System Report..., with your memory, processor, hard drive and other components separated into tabs.Go to link Download
Friday, September 23, 2016
How to increase Maximum File Transfer size of USB in Windows 7
How to increase Maximum File Transfer size of USB in Windows 7
In Windows 7 and Windows 2008 R2, the maximum transfer size of USB is set to 64 KB. It means at one instant, maximum file size to be transferred from Windows 7 Computer to USB Devices is 64 KB. To override that restriction, Microsoft released a hotfix to increase the maximum transfer size from 64 kilobytes (KB) to 2 megabytes (MB) in the Usbstor.sys driver.
Download Update kb2581464 from official website. Select the Windows version (32 or 64 Bit) and enter email address to request download link on email.
--Click Start, type regedit in the Start Search box, and then press Enter.
--Locate and then click the following registry subkey:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESSYSTEMCurrentControlSetControlusbstor54C00C1
--Click Edit, point to New, and then click DWORDValue.
--Type MaximumTransferLength, and then press Enter.
--Click Edit, and then click Modify.
--In the Value data box, type a value to specify the maximum transfer size between 64KB and 2MB. For example, you select Decimal and type a value between 65535 (64K) and 2097120 (2M).
--Exit Registry Editor.
Restart the computer and changes are made now! Try connecting USB Pendrive or something and you will notice changes immediately when transferring file.
Download Update kb2581464 from official website. Select the Windows version (32 or 64 Bit) and enter email address to request download link on email.
--Click Start, type regedit in the Start Search box, and then press Enter.
--Locate and then click the following registry subkey:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESSYSTEMCurrentControlSetControlusbstor54C00C1
--Click Edit, point to New, and then click DWORDValue.
--Type MaximumTransferLength, and then press Enter.
--Click Edit, and then click Modify.
--In the Value data box, type a value to specify the maximum transfer size between 64KB and 2MB. For example, you select Decimal and type a value between 65535 (64K) and 2097120 (2M).
--Exit Registry Editor.
Restart the computer and changes are made now! Try connecting USB Pendrive or something and you will notice changes immediately when transferring file.
Go to link Download
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