![]() I have had my browser eat so much bandwidth that nothing else can get a bite. I have found that most browsers WANT to have the connection to the page you request at the expense of everything on the system. ![]() If you are visiting a gaming website where the pages are very "busy" ie alot of graphics and sounds and scripts, these will tax your bandwidth to the point that it stalls anything else using the network. Quote from: Hotrod on December 04, 2012, 01:32:29 PM I may depend greatly on exactly WHAT things you like to do with your browser. Now, back to the previously written thread. " Process Lasso can help manage memory priorities by allowing persistent memory priorities to be set for processes, so that their virtual memory pages are set to a specific priority each time run. When the Memory Manager wants to take a page from the Standby List, it takes pages from the low-priority lists first. ![]() The Standby List is divided into eight lists that each handle pages of a different priority. MEMORY_PRIORITY_VERY_LOW 1 MEMORY_PRIORITY_LOW 2 MEMORY_PRIORITY_MEDIUM 3 MEMORY_PRIORITY_BELOW_NORMAL 4 MEMORY_PRIORITY_NORMAL 5 MEMORY_PRIORITY_UNDEFINED_HIGH 6 MEMORY_PRIORITY_UNDEFINED_HIGHEST 7 Technet quote "Beginning with Windows Vista, each memory page has a priority ranging from 0 to 7. Pages with the highest memory priority will be paged out last, all other factors being equal. Memory page priorities are 0-7, with 0 being the lowest and 5 being the default (normal). For cases where there is not much paging going on, they are not really of great importance. Note from Bitsum (not author of this post): Windows memory page priorities are used to help the virtual memory manager decide what pages should remain in RAM during high memory loads.
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