Gene Heskett wrote: > On Tuesday 10 July 2007, Paul Smith wrote: >> On 7/10/07, alan <alan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> When my previous computer was 4 years old, the RAM memory for it was >>>> rarely available and, when available, was expensive. Now, I have a new >>>> computer, one year old. Could someone please help me with determining >>>> the right time to buy new memory in order to buy it the cheapest >>>> possible? >>> One to two weeks before you actually buy it. The universe has an >>> automatic need detector that jacks up the price a week before you get the >>> order in. >> Please, read some book on economics before playing the role of an >> ignorant comedian. >> >> Paul > > With all due respect Paul, I believe that is a corollary to Murphy's Law that > has been verified many times over the last 60+ years since I first heard of > that gentleman. Not only that... It is the type of question one needs a crystal ball to answer. First off, the OP doesn't indicate if the computer is a laptop or desktop. It makes a substantial difference as the form factor of laptop memory is forever changing while a desktop's remain fairly static. Second, since the OP brought it up, one will have to factor in things like the rate of inflation, exchange rates, etc. Where is Alan Greenspan when you need him? Not to mention that "cheap" is a relative word. Depending on ones disposable income, a 10% increase/decrease may not be an issue. FWIW, I tend to simply buy the maximum RAM possible for my systems at the time I configure them. Why? Because I want to maximize the systems potential. I would probably buy a spare as well...but not always. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list