My second computer is a 4-5 year old Dell Dimension 4500S with a 1.8Ghz P4 and only 256 MB of 266 Mhz DDR266 PC2100 RAM.
It works fine to surf the internet and all that good stuff, which is all my wife uses it for. However, it's getting a bit "chuggy" lately, even though the HD clutter is minimal and Scandisk and Defrag don't seem to make it any better. She's doing more file downloading and internet apps and pages are getting a bit more complicated, so I'm positive I just need more RAM. I think 1GB should be enough, though the motherboard is designed to take two.
Here's my question:
I've got two memory slots. I've heard conflicting information about how to configure the memory. Can I keep the 256 MB I already have and simply add the 1GB stick? Would I have to get 2-512MB sticks and fill both slots for optimal performance? (I read that one online but don't think it's true). Do I put the bigger RAM where the current RAM is and move the 256MB to the second slot if I can?
I've read a few different "HT upgrade your memory" guides but I read different things and before I spend my money and minutes of time I'd like to get this cleared up.
It works fine to surf the internet and all that good stuff, which is all my wife uses it for. However, it's getting a bit "chuggy" lately, even though the HD clutter is minimal and Scandisk and Defrag don't seem to make it any better. She's doing more file downloading and internet apps and pages are getting a bit more complicated, so I'm positive I just need more RAM. I think 1GB should be enough, though the motherboard is designed to take two.
Here's my question:
I've got two memory slots. I've heard conflicting information about how to configure the memory. Can I keep the 256 MB I already have and simply add the 1GB stick? Would I have to get 2-512MB sticks and fill both slots for optimal performance? (I read that one online but don't think it's true). Do I put the bigger RAM where the current RAM is and move the 256MB to the second slot if I can?
I've read a few different "HT upgrade your memory" guides but I read different things and before I spend my money and minutes of time I'd like to get this cleared up.