----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Godfrey DiGiorgi"
Subject: Re: OT: Mac Computer



> Photoshop CS3 will use at most 2G RAM no matter how you push it.

Perhaps on a Mac......

From:

http://kb.adobe.com/selfservice/viewContent.do?externalId=kb401088&sliceId=1

"Allocating memory above 2 GB with 64-bit processors
Photoshop CS3 is a 32-bit application. When it runs on a 32-bit operating 
system, such as
Windows XP Professional and some versions of Windows Vista, it can access the 
first 2 GB of RAM
on the computer.The operating system uses some of this RAM, so the Photoshop 
Memory Usage
preference displays only a maximum of 1.6 or 1.7 GB of total available RAM. If 
you are running
Windows XP Professional with Service Pack 2, you can set the 3 GB switch in the 
boot.ini file,
which allows Photoshop to use up to 3 GB of RAM.

Important: The 3 GB switch is a Microsoft switch and may not work with all 
computers. Contact
Microsoft for instructions before you set the 3 GB switch, and for 
troubleshooting the switch.
You can search on the Microsoft support page for 3gb for information on this 
switch.

When you run Photoshop CS3 on a computer with a 64-bit processor (such as a, 
Intel Xeon
processor with EM64T, AMD Athlon 64, or Opteron processor) running a 64-bit 
version of the
operating system (Windows XP Professional x64 Edition or Windows Vista 64-bit) 
and with 4 GB or
more of RAM, Photoshop will use 3 GB for it's image data. You can see the 
actual amount of RAM
Photoshop can use in the Let Photoshop Use number when you set the Let 
Photoshop Use slider in
the Performance preference to 100%. The RAM above the 100% used by Photoshop, 
which is from
approximately 3 GB to 3.7 GB, can be used directly by Photoshop plug-ins (some 
plug-ins need
large chunks of contiguous RAM), filters, or actions. If you have more than 4 
GB (to 6 GB), then
the RAM above 4 GB is used by the operating system as a cache for the Photoshop 
scratch disk
data. Data that previously was written directly to the hard disk by Photoshop 
is now cached in
this high RAM before being written to the hard disk by the operating system. If 
you are working
with files large enough to take advantage of these extra 2 GB of RAM, the RAM 
cache can speed
performance of Photoshop. Additionally, in Windows Vista 64-bit, processing 
very large images is
much faster if your computer has large amounts of RAM (6-8 GB)."


William Robb 


-- 
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
[email protected]
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow 
the directions.

Reply via email to