Where has my RAM gone?












1















I have 8 GB of RAM installed, as you can see here:



amount of ram avalible



… and in Task Manager, it's showing that I'm using around 500 MB.



see here



50% of 8 is 4, so 25% of 8 must be 2. Then why is it telling me that 500 MB is 25% of my RAM?



And what is this?



enter image description here



What should I do? Does this have anything to do with the virtual memory paging file?



this



RamMap shows this:



pic of rammap










share|improve this question





























    1















    I have 8 GB of RAM installed, as you can see here:



    amount of ram avalible



    … and in Task Manager, it's showing that I'm using around 500 MB.



    see here



    50% of 8 is 4, so 25% of 8 must be 2. Then why is it telling me that 500 MB is 25% of my RAM?



    And what is this?



    enter image description here



    What should I do? Does this have anything to do with the virtual memory paging file?



    this



    RamMap shows this:



    pic of rammap










    share|improve this question



























      1












      1








      1


      1






      I have 8 GB of RAM installed, as you can see here:



      amount of ram avalible



      … and in Task Manager, it's showing that I'm using around 500 MB.



      see here



      50% of 8 is 4, so 25% of 8 must be 2. Then why is it telling me that 500 MB is 25% of my RAM?



      And what is this?



      enter image description here



      What should I do? Does this have anything to do with the virtual memory paging file?



      this



      RamMap shows this:



      pic of rammap










      share|improve this question
















      I have 8 GB of RAM installed, as you can see here:



      amount of ram avalible



      … and in Task Manager, it's showing that I'm using around 500 MB.



      see here



      50% of 8 is 4, so 25% of 8 must be 2. Then why is it telling me that 500 MB is 25% of my RAM?



      And what is this?



      enter image description here



      What should I do? Does this have anything to do with the virtual memory paging file?



      this



      RamMap shows this:



      pic of rammap







      windows-10 memory virtual-memory






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Jan 27 at 21:02









      DavidPostill

      107k27234268




      107k27234268










      asked Jan 27 at 20:41









      Homam GamerHomam Gamer

      113




      113






















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          4














          You have selected the User tab in Task Manager which will only show you statistics for processes that are running as your user. You'll notice that the column header in your first screenshot says:



              27%
          Memory
          -------
          485.3MB


          This does not mean that 485.3MB is 27% of your memory, but that your user account is using 485.3MB of memory and the total memory usage of your computer is 27%.



          As you can see in this screenshot, I have changed the value (through Right-Click on the column header) to show Percent rather than Values, this shows that the total memory usage is 61% and my user profile is using 51%.



          User profile memory usage vs. total system memory usage



          There are several other accounts that are not "Users" per se:



          SYSTEM
          LOCAL SERVICE
          NETWORK SERVICE
          etc.


          All of these run processes, services, and drivers that require memory to function.






          share|improve this answer


























          • i don't have another user, trust me. and you can see the blank space beneath it, which indicates that there is no other users

            – Homam Gamer
            Jan 27 at 21:22






          • 3





            @HomamGamer sorry maybe I understand your question wrong or wasn’t clear enough. In the third screenshot the task manager shows that 2.2GB of 7.9GB are in use, which is about 28% of the installed RAM. This 2.2GB contains system processes, user processes and etc. In the first screenshot you see that your user uses about 500MB of RAM. In Detail: All processes owned by this user allocated 500MB RAM. The above shown 27% are related to current allocated RAM of all processes. As I mentioned in the beginning maybe I understand your question wrong, in this case sorry for the confusion.

            – MarvinMcFly
            Jan 27 at 21:32






          • 2





            Actually, it has everything to do with system processes.

            – Daniel B
            Jan 28 at 6:35






          • 1





            You hit the nail on the head with this answer, just not hard enough to drive it home. I've fleshed it out a bit to show the reasoning behind the answer.

            – Michael Frank
            Jan 28 at 6:48






          • 2





            Why do you think you need to buy more? You have almost 6 GB available!

            – Jamie Hanrahan
            Jan 29 at 11:48











          Your Answer








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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          4














          You have selected the User tab in Task Manager which will only show you statistics for processes that are running as your user. You'll notice that the column header in your first screenshot says:



              27%
          Memory
          -------
          485.3MB


          This does not mean that 485.3MB is 27% of your memory, but that your user account is using 485.3MB of memory and the total memory usage of your computer is 27%.



          As you can see in this screenshot, I have changed the value (through Right-Click on the column header) to show Percent rather than Values, this shows that the total memory usage is 61% and my user profile is using 51%.



          User profile memory usage vs. total system memory usage



          There are several other accounts that are not "Users" per se:



          SYSTEM
          LOCAL SERVICE
          NETWORK SERVICE
          etc.


          All of these run processes, services, and drivers that require memory to function.






          share|improve this answer


























          • i don't have another user, trust me. and you can see the blank space beneath it, which indicates that there is no other users

            – Homam Gamer
            Jan 27 at 21:22






          • 3





            @HomamGamer sorry maybe I understand your question wrong or wasn’t clear enough. In the third screenshot the task manager shows that 2.2GB of 7.9GB are in use, which is about 28% of the installed RAM. This 2.2GB contains system processes, user processes and etc. In the first screenshot you see that your user uses about 500MB of RAM. In Detail: All processes owned by this user allocated 500MB RAM. The above shown 27% are related to current allocated RAM of all processes. As I mentioned in the beginning maybe I understand your question wrong, in this case sorry for the confusion.

            – MarvinMcFly
            Jan 27 at 21:32






          • 2





            Actually, it has everything to do with system processes.

            – Daniel B
            Jan 28 at 6:35






          • 1





            You hit the nail on the head with this answer, just not hard enough to drive it home. I've fleshed it out a bit to show the reasoning behind the answer.

            – Michael Frank
            Jan 28 at 6:48






          • 2





            Why do you think you need to buy more? You have almost 6 GB available!

            – Jamie Hanrahan
            Jan 29 at 11:48
















          4














          You have selected the User tab in Task Manager which will only show you statistics for processes that are running as your user. You'll notice that the column header in your first screenshot says:



              27%
          Memory
          -------
          485.3MB


          This does not mean that 485.3MB is 27% of your memory, but that your user account is using 485.3MB of memory and the total memory usage of your computer is 27%.



          As you can see in this screenshot, I have changed the value (through Right-Click on the column header) to show Percent rather than Values, this shows that the total memory usage is 61% and my user profile is using 51%.



          User profile memory usage vs. total system memory usage



          There are several other accounts that are not "Users" per se:



          SYSTEM
          LOCAL SERVICE
          NETWORK SERVICE
          etc.


          All of these run processes, services, and drivers that require memory to function.






          share|improve this answer


























          • i don't have another user, trust me. and you can see the blank space beneath it, which indicates that there is no other users

            – Homam Gamer
            Jan 27 at 21:22






          • 3





            @HomamGamer sorry maybe I understand your question wrong or wasn’t clear enough. In the third screenshot the task manager shows that 2.2GB of 7.9GB are in use, which is about 28% of the installed RAM. This 2.2GB contains system processes, user processes and etc. In the first screenshot you see that your user uses about 500MB of RAM. In Detail: All processes owned by this user allocated 500MB RAM. The above shown 27% are related to current allocated RAM of all processes. As I mentioned in the beginning maybe I understand your question wrong, in this case sorry for the confusion.

            – MarvinMcFly
            Jan 27 at 21:32






          • 2





            Actually, it has everything to do with system processes.

            – Daniel B
            Jan 28 at 6:35






          • 1





            You hit the nail on the head with this answer, just not hard enough to drive it home. I've fleshed it out a bit to show the reasoning behind the answer.

            – Michael Frank
            Jan 28 at 6:48






          • 2





            Why do you think you need to buy more? You have almost 6 GB available!

            – Jamie Hanrahan
            Jan 29 at 11:48














          4












          4








          4







          You have selected the User tab in Task Manager which will only show you statistics for processes that are running as your user. You'll notice that the column header in your first screenshot says:



              27%
          Memory
          -------
          485.3MB


          This does not mean that 485.3MB is 27% of your memory, but that your user account is using 485.3MB of memory and the total memory usage of your computer is 27%.



          As you can see in this screenshot, I have changed the value (through Right-Click on the column header) to show Percent rather than Values, this shows that the total memory usage is 61% and my user profile is using 51%.



          User profile memory usage vs. total system memory usage



          There are several other accounts that are not "Users" per se:



          SYSTEM
          LOCAL SERVICE
          NETWORK SERVICE
          etc.


          All of these run processes, services, and drivers that require memory to function.






          share|improve this answer















          You have selected the User tab in Task Manager which will only show you statistics for processes that are running as your user. You'll notice that the column header in your first screenshot says:



              27%
          Memory
          -------
          485.3MB


          This does not mean that 485.3MB is 27% of your memory, but that your user account is using 485.3MB of memory and the total memory usage of your computer is 27%.



          As you can see in this screenshot, I have changed the value (through Right-Click on the column header) to show Percent rather than Values, this shows that the total memory usage is 61% and my user profile is using 51%.



          User profile memory usage vs. total system memory usage



          There are several other accounts that are not "Users" per se:



          SYSTEM
          LOCAL SERVICE
          NETWORK SERVICE
          etc.


          All of these run processes, services, and drivers that require memory to function.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Jan 28 at 6:46









          Michael Frank

          6,41613046




          6,41613046










          answered Jan 27 at 21:17









          MarvinMcFlyMarvinMcFly

          642




          642













          • i don't have another user, trust me. and you can see the blank space beneath it, which indicates that there is no other users

            – Homam Gamer
            Jan 27 at 21:22






          • 3





            @HomamGamer sorry maybe I understand your question wrong or wasn’t clear enough. In the third screenshot the task manager shows that 2.2GB of 7.9GB are in use, which is about 28% of the installed RAM. This 2.2GB contains system processes, user processes and etc. In the first screenshot you see that your user uses about 500MB of RAM. In Detail: All processes owned by this user allocated 500MB RAM. The above shown 27% are related to current allocated RAM of all processes. As I mentioned in the beginning maybe I understand your question wrong, in this case sorry for the confusion.

            – MarvinMcFly
            Jan 27 at 21:32






          • 2





            Actually, it has everything to do with system processes.

            – Daniel B
            Jan 28 at 6:35






          • 1





            You hit the nail on the head with this answer, just not hard enough to drive it home. I've fleshed it out a bit to show the reasoning behind the answer.

            – Michael Frank
            Jan 28 at 6:48






          • 2





            Why do you think you need to buy more? You have almost 6 GB available!

            – Jamie Hanrahan
            Jan 29 at 11:48



















          • i don't have another user, trust me. and you can see the blank space beneath it, which indicates that there is no other users

            – Homam Gamer
            Jan 27 at 21:22






          • 3





            @HomamGamer sorry maybe I understand your question wrong or wasn’t clear enough. In the third screenshot the task manager shows that 2.2GB of 7.9GB are in use, which is about 28% of the installed RAM. This 2.2GB contains system processes, user processes and etc. In the first screenshot you see that your user uses about 500MB of RAM. In Detail: All processes owned by this user allocated 500MB RAM. The above shown 27% are related to current allocated RAM of all processes. As I mentioned in the beginning maybe I understand your question wrong, in this case sorry for the confusion.

            – MarvinMcFly
            Jan 27 at 21:32






          • 2





            Actually, it has everything to do with system processes.

            – Daniel B
            Jan 28 at 6:35






          • 1





            You hit the nail on the head with this answer, just not hard enough to drive it home. I've fleshed it out a bit to show the reasoning behind the answer.

            – Michael Frank
            Jan 28 at 6:48






          • 2





            Why do you think you need to buy more? You have almost 6 GB available!

            – Jamie Hanrahan
            Jan 29 at 11:48

















          i don't have another user, trust me. and you can see the blank space beneath it, which indicates that there is no other users

          – Homam Gamer
          Jan 27 at 21:22





          i don't have another user, trust me. and you can see the blank space beneath it, which indicates that there is no other users

          – Homam Gamer
          Jan 27 at 21:22




          3




          3





          @HomamGamer sorry maybe I understand your question wrong or wasn’t clear enough. In the third screenshot the task manager shows that 2.2GB of 7.9GB are in use, which is about 28% of the installed RAM. This 2.2GB contains system processes, user processes and etc. In the first screenshot you see that your user uses about 500MB of RAM. In Detail: All processes owned by this user allocated 500MB RAM. The above shown 27% are related to current allocated RAM of all processes. As I mentioned in the beginning maybe I understand your question wrong, in this case sorry for the confusion.

          – MarvinMcFly
          Jan 27 at 21:32





          @HomamGamer sorry maybe I understand your question wrong or wasn’t clear enough. In the third screenshot the task manager shows that 2.2GB of 7.9GB are in use, which is about 28% of the installed RAM. This 2.2GB contains system processes, user processes and etc. In the first screenshot you see that your user uses about 500MB of RAM. In Detail: All processes owned by this user allocated 500MB RAM. The above shown 27% are related to current allocated RAM of all processes. As I mentioned in the beginning maybe I understand your question wrong, in this case sorry for the confusion.

          – MarvinMcFly
          Jan 27 at 21:32




          2




          2





          Actually, it has everything to do with system processes.

          – Daniel B
          Jan 28 at 6:35





          Actually, it has everything to do with system processes.

          – Daniel B
          Jan 28 at 6:35




          1




          1





          You hit the nail on the head with this answer, just not hard enough to drive it home. I've fleshed it out a bit to show the reasoning behind the answer.

          – Michael Frank
          Jan 28 at 6:48





          You hit the nail on the head with this answer, just not hard enough to drive it home. I've fleshed it out a bit to show the reasoning behind the answer.

          – Michael Frank
          Jan 28 at 6:48




          2




          2





          Why do you think you need to buy more? You have almost 6 GB available!

          – Jamie Hanrahan
          Jan 29 at 11:48





          Why do you think you need to buy more? You have almost 6 GB available!

          – Jamie Hanrahan
          Jan 29 at 11:48


















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