5001 Total physical RAM installed in the system. 5002 Total physical memory that is not currently committed to programs, disk caching, or other uses. Since Windows attempts to keep as much information as possible in RAM, it is normal for this number to be low. 5003 On Windows 95, this number is a measure of how much "essential" information is currently being stored in physical memory, with lower numbers indicating a lower load on system RAM. On Windows NT this number is not provided and shows as zero. 5004 Indicates the total size of the page (swap) file. In the case where Windows manages the page file dynamically, this will usually be the amount of free disk space on the drive that holds the page file. 5005 Indicates the amount of page (swap) file space currently being used. 5006 A measure of the CPU's performance in reading data, measured in megabytes per second. This test reads blocks of data into the CPU in a variety of block sizes to determine the effectiveness of any RAM caches that may be present. 5007 A measure of the CPU's performance in writing data. This test writes blocks of data to memory in a variety of block sizes. RAM caches are generally not as effective on writes, so performance on this test will generally be lower than on the read test. 5008 A measure of the CPU's performance in copying data. This test reads and then writes blocks of data in a variety of block sizes. For a given block size, this test moves twice the data as the read or write test since it does both reading and writing. 5009 The virtual memory page (swap) file gives best performance when it is located on a disk that is using 32-bit drivers. 5010 Total physical memory available to Windows. This may be less installed RAM if the BIOS is using some memory to shadow system or video ROMs, or if 16-bit device drivers in CONFIG.SYS or AUTOEXEC.BAT are using memory. 5011 Date and time that tests were completed. 5101 Tip MEM101: Install more RAM 5102 Tip MEM102: Use 32-bit page file driver 5103 Tip MEM103: Change Typical Role to Mobile 5104 Tip MEM104: Reduce CD-ROM cache size 5105 Tip MEM105: Increase DOS (low 640KB) memory 5106 Tip MEM106: Check RAM write wait states 5107 Tip MEM107: Check RAM read wait states 5108 Tip MEM108: Create a fixed-size page file 5109 Tip MEM109: Move page file to faster disk 5110 Tip MEM110: Move page file to roomier disk 5111 Tip MEM111: Check system resources 5112 Tip MEM112: Check CPU cache settings 5201 One of the best ways to improve performance is to add more RAM. Windows 95 needs at least 8MB for smooth operation, and we recommend 12MB or more for best performance. 5203 On a system with less than 8MB of RAM, Microsoft recommends that you set the 'Typical role of this system' to Mobile. This reduces operating system buffers to conserve memory. See the help system for instructions. 5206 The RAM Write performance is very low for a system of this class. There may be extra unnecessary wait states set in the system BIOS, or very slow memory may have been installed. 5207 The RAM Read performance is very low for a system of this class. There may be extra unnecessary wait states set in the system BIOS, or very slow memory may have been installed. 5212 Wintune's memory read performance test is extremely low for this type of system. Your CPU's internal (level 1) cache may be disabled in your BIOS setup. This causes significant performance problems.