Instalează Steam
conectare
|
limbă
简体中文 (chineză simplificată)
繁體中文 (chineză tradițională)
日本語 (japoneză)
한국어 (coreeană)
ไทย (thailandeză)
български (bulgară)
Čeština (cehă)
Dansk (daneză)
Deutsch (germană)
English (engleză)
Español - España (spaniolă - Spania)
Español - Latinoamérica (spaniolă - America Latină)
Ελληνικά (greacă)
Français (franceză)
Italiano (italiană)
Bahasa Indonesia (indoneziană)
Magyar (maghiară)
Nederlands (neerlandeză)
Norsk (norvegiană)
Polski (poloneză)
Português (portugheză - Portugalia)
Português - Brasil (portugheză - Brazilia)
Русский (rusă)
Suomi (finlandeză)
Svenska (suedeză)
Türkçe (turcă)
Tiếng Việt (vietnameză)
Українська (ucraineană)
Raportează o problemă de traducere
Try using CrystalDiskMark and run a Speed test for it whilst not downloading.
EDIT: Illusion is write I had that part backwards
DRAM effects writes, not reads, so loading games will be no different whether DRAM is present or not.
Installing games (which is being done while Steam downloads), however, is writing to the drive. That may be impacted by a lack of DRAM, but the drive's cache and NAND write speed are going the be the real factors that determine performance for that. It just so happens that drives without DRAM also tend to have slower, smaller caches and/or slower NAND.
Whatever differences the lack of DRAM causes will be minimized further on NVMe drives where HMB uses system RAM to substitutes DRAM. On SATA, yeah, a bit of a different story.
If an SSD drive ever slows from one consistent speed to another during a long writing task, it is likely because the cache has been exhausted and its writing to slower NAND.
And remember those files need to be decompressed too, slows writes a bit.
Thanks anyway, for future stuff