Who knows. That was just a guess.
I finally broke down and installed an awesome browser extension, though I'm technically testing two different extensions in two different browsers, 'cause I want to see what's best for my needs.
I have, in just this browser, 99 open tabs. That's a whole lot of RAM being used for tabs I just keep open to have them handy.
So, I installed an extension that puts unused tabs to sleep. They load when I click on them, but are otherwise not resident in RAM. I can pick tabs to never get sent to sleep, like this one and a forum or two that I frequent.
I also installed another extension, one that doesn't let YouTube videos autoplay. I have a ton of YouTube tabs and they autoplay when they're opened, even if you just flipped through it. So, I found a working extension to stop YouTube videos from always playing.
My RAM use (and this computer has 64 GB of RAM, which you'd think was enough) dropped by 2/3rds.
I normally am of the opinion that 'unused RAM is wasted RAM', but I don't want to waste RAM on tabs I might open once every few months.
Anyhow, this freed up RAM for more useful things. I was getting sluggish behavior on a system with 64 GB of RAM!
I have another desktop that has 96 GB of RAM, but that one doesn't care how many tabs I have open.
I don't have that many tabs open. Maybe 8, and my son always comments that I'm using up all the RAM when he notices
Unused RAM is wasted RAM, is my general response. You have the RAM to use. The more RAM being used, the more optimal your system is, at a basic level. Obviously RAM management can be important and you want to use your RAM for various tasks, but there's nothing wrong with using your RAM.
Well, unless you have it constantly pegged at 100%. You need some free RAM to swap stuff in and out as you use various applications.
I have like 170 open tabs across two browser instances - one Chrome and the other Chromium. That was mostly wasting RAM, so I changed it up to the current configuration. I seldom open all those tabs, they're just there 'cause it'd be unwieldy to try to store them all as bookmarks.
Speaking of computers, did you fix your laptop?
Its okay
I doubt we'll ever know the truth. They did register the domain name on August 24th and registered it for two years (you only need to register for a year). They also took the time to put it behind CloudFlare and use whois privacy settings.
It seems a bit odd to register it for twice as long as you must only to turn around and not use it for anything. But, then again, there are millions and millions of domain names that don't host anything.
(post is archived)