This is not a problem, but perhaps sooner or later a problem might develop.
If a computer's running low on memory, how can one tell what's taking up a lot of memory?
I ask this because during the Scamdal the spring-summer of 2005, the computer I had at the time went low on memory, and so I went to the big city to buy more memory. The guy behind the counter said no, you don't need more memory; bring the unit in, and I'll take care of it.
So I took the tower in, the guy glanced at the guts, and deleted a Word document, and presto! no more problems with memory.
This particular Word document had been used during the Scamdal, for posting on the DUmmie FUnnies, and given the rate I was posting, the document was "changed" and "saved" many times during a single day, for about two months straight.
Apparently that was eating up tons, mountains, of memory.
So.....in the event, which one hopes it pleases God doesn't happen for a long time yet, one is told the computer's running low on memory, how does one check to see what it is, that's consuming all that memory, so as to get rid of it?