Originally posted by GreyGeek
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Ahh, even better/worse!
Seriously, unplug it. As long as you DO NOT ground to the motherboard or the RAM unit, you'll be fine. Grounding yourself to the case/chassis is perfectly acceptable.The next brick house on the left
Intel i7 11th Gen | 16GB | 1TB | KDE Plasma 5.27.11| Kubuntu 24.04 | 6.8.0-31-generic
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Originally posted by anonprivate View PostWould leaving the plug in, but switched off, be a good idea because it give a route to earth
If the PC is plugged in but even switched off there are still one or more hot points in the power supply. If a component is faulty or leaky YOU might become a path to ground.
Unplugged, all that is needed is that you wait for a minute or so to give power capacitors a chance to drain before you attach a grounding wire to the PS chassis and your wrist. That allows you and the mobo to be at the same electromotive potential before you start pulling old RAM and plugging in the new RAM.
If your work area is carpeted and you walk across the carpet to the PC and touch the unplugged and drained PC you could still build up enough static electric charge to create a 5,000 to 15,000 volt discharge spark. It won’t have enough current to kill you but it could kill a delicate component.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk"A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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I have removed the existing RAM and installed 4 x 1GB of memory. It is reading 3.9 GB
It looks a lot better:
Code:andrew@andrew-Dell-DM061:~$ free -h total used free shared buffers cached Mem: 3.9G 2.2G 1.7G 83M 70M 722M -/+ buffers/cache: 1.4G 2.5G Swap: 1.0G 0B 1.0G
I am still experimentingLast edited by anonprivate; Feb 24, 2018, 06:50 AM.kubuntu version: 16.04.5 LTS
Laptop: Toshiba-Satellite-L350
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Why is the system using the swap partition when RAM is still available?
Code:ndrew@andrew-Dell-DM061:~$ free -h total used free shared buffers cached Mem: 3.9G 3.3G 570M 94M 91M 985M -/+ buffers/cache: 2.3G 1.6G Swap: 1.0G 13M 1.0G
kubuntu version: 16.04.5 LTS
Laptop: Toshiba-Satellite-L350
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Using 13/1000th of your swap is using much. Notice that your Free equals 1.0G as well. Like memory, it often isn't cleared, just overwritten the next time it is needed."A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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Originally posted by GreyGeek View PostUsing 13/1000th of your swap is using much. Notice that your Free equals 1.0G as well. Like memory, it often isn't cleared, just overwritten the next time it is needed.Last edited by anonprivate; Feb 25, 2018, 08:32 AM.kubuntu version: 16.04.5 LTS
Laptop: Toshiba-Satellite-L350
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Originally posted by anonprivate View PostDoes this mean that I must have exceeded 4 GB of RAM at some stage, and this partition has not cleared completely. Hence I see usage.
Firefox used to (a few years ago) do this for me for each tab on Google groups, about 300 MiB, when I only had 1 and 2 GiB; it took me months to work out what was happening, Kubuntu thrashed for several minutes, and by the time I could run monitors like top the usage had dropped. Firefox fixed part of the problem, then reduced memory usage again, and I got more RAM, so my problem went away. I'm not a Google Chrome or Chromium user, but it has a reputation for doing things like this for script-laden news web sites; for some users Windows doesn't cope well and tabs crash a lot.
Linux I/O buffering can have a similar effect when copying large files, on some old-ish hardware, especially using the CFQ scheduler. I never understood what was happening with that, or why it wasn't considered a serious bug.
*(I've written code like that, for some tasks it's quite liberating, no I/O to worry about.)Regards, John Little
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Originally posted by jlittle View PostI'm not sure about this, but I think some software can map a lot of memory initially, without using it.* So, the swap file usage does not always indicate anything has been swapped out. Once some OS stuff has been mapped to swap it tends to sit there.
Firefox used to (a few years ago) do this for me for each tab on Google groups, about 300 MiB, when I only had 1 and 2 GiB; it took me months to work out what was happening, Kubuntu thrashed for several minutes, and by the time I could run monitors like top the usage had dropped. Firefox fixed part of the problem, then reduced memory usage again, and I got more RAM, so my problem went away. I'm not a Google Chrome or Chromium user, but it has a reputation for doing things like this for script-laden news web sites; for some users Windows doesn't cope well and tabs crash a lot.
Linux I/O buffering can have a similar effect when copying large files, on some old-ish hardware, especially using the CFQ scheduler. I never understood what was happening with that, or why it wasn't considered a serious bug.
*(I've written code like that, for some tasks it's quite liberating, no I/O to worry about.)
I would just like to thank all users who have contributed to this thread.
Best wishes.kubuntu version: 16.04.5 LTS
Laptop: Toshiba-Satellite-L350
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