Comment on Mozilla lays off 60 people, wants to build AI into Firefox

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Vlyn@lemmy.zip ⁨10⁩ ⁨months⁩ ago

“Doing nothing” is probably downloading an update. There’s also a difference between reserved RAM and actually used one.

For example .NET applications grab RAM when they need it, but they don’t just free it afterwards if not necessary (Like it needs 1 GB, uses that, but when the work is done your task manager keeps showing 1 GB). This helps performance, if the application needs RAM again a short time later it’s already reserved and ready to go.

The whole behavior changes when Windows is low on free RAM, then applications are forced to free up their reserved RAM so you don’t start swapping too much.

Overall this means: The more RAM your system has the higher the perceived RAM usage of your system. Unused RAM is wasted RAM and it’s easy to free up some if you actually hit the limit. As long as your RAM is not full applications will happily use more and hold onto it to be more responsive.

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