|
In an age when most computers come with 4+ GB of RAM, I think people focus too much on memory. Of course there are older computers, but their OS should be using comparably less RAM. WinXP takes up 100 MB at login, so if you only have 1 GB on an older computer, you should still have no problem running modern Firefox. And if you only have 512 MB, it's probably time to upgrade since the web experience that a modern browser can offer you will be crippled by your old hardware. A few months ago I had a conversation with somebody who complained that Firefox used too much memory (about 600 MB). I asked how much he had. He said 3 GB. That seemed more than enough to me, after all Gnome consumes 200-500 MB at login, depending on whether you're using 32 or 64 bit and which shell you're running (Gnome 2, Gnome Shell, Unity, etc). Turns out, Win7 was eating 2 GB at login, leaving him with only a gigabyte for other programs. In my view, the operating system is just a platform to launch other stuff. It shouldn't use more than 25% of your memory. If it does, you should either get more RAM or slim down your OS. If his computer obeyed my rubric, he'd have plenty of room for Firefox. His anger was obviously directed at the wrong problem, but for some reason the OS (and all the crapware which loads at boot and runs in the background, even when it's not needed, consuming precious resources) gets a pass. |
After a manufacturer begrudgingly provides the RAM that developers refuse to conserve, we shouldn't then use the presence of this additional RAM to use even more.
Your friend's anger at application waste is justified. Witness new devices like the iPad that survive with much less RAM than a desktop -- just 512MB, which happens to be enough to support an excellent browser.