Does your notebook came with little RAM? Would you like to enlarge? There is something very difficult to do and MadBoxPC you how to do it as quickly and easily.
The sale of notebooks has increased every year throughout the world and Chile is no exception. The market trends to guide the sale of notebooks exceed sales of desktop PCs worldwide in a short time (in some countries of the world and so, for example in the U.S.). One of the disadvantages that have the notebooks regarding their similes of "desktop" is that they are less updatable due to its compact design and modular components that few possess.
Some of the things easily changeable in a notebook are the RAM and hard drives, giving it greater complexity to processors as well as some optical drives and wireless network cards. The other components of a notebook are theoretically changeable depending on the model, specifications, etc.., Which cannot always be performed and requires greater knowledge and experience.
Taking into account the cost over that notebook manufacturers have to buy more RAM to buy a team (which is roughly double what it costs to buy the RAM yourself) is that we have made this small but teaching guide that will also serve to belie (in part) that the notebooks they cannot be easily change some of its components.
In our case we take a core team Acer Aspire 3650 (which we look at our reviews), which originally came with only 256Mb of RAM type SODIMM DDR2 533 mhz, which we had already added another module to make a total 256Mb of 512Mb.
Taking a total of 512Mb RAM clearly had some trouble using applications such as Photoshop or to run multiple programs at once, something that solutions partly through overclock from 1.46 GHz to 2.0 GHz without major problems, but the RAM was our neck bottle on many occasions.
Given that the market there are many memory modules RAM different speeds, we realize that the memories of 533 Mhz were more expensive than those of 667 MHz, for which we apply the same philosophy as in desktops, "gives us the the same team that works with memories slower than the rated speed of the reports we're using. "
With that in mind, we bought at a price affordable generic module SODIMM 1GB of DDR2 677 mhz with the idea of using it in our team, a procedure that we will see in the next page. The necessary tools with our team were only a Phillips screwdriver.


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