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#11
[QUOTEIn addition to applications crashing anytime you run up against the memory limit, you'll also come across a lot of applications that simply won't run properly if the pagefile is disabled. For instance, you really won't want to run a virtual machine on a box with no pagefile, and some defrag utilities will also fail. You'll also notice some other strange, indefinable behavior when your pagefile is disabled—in my experience, a lot of things just don't always work right.][/QUOTE]
2009(older but still true): Understanding the Windows Pagefile and Why You Shouldnt Disable It
Another informative read at Tweak Hound: The Windows 7 Pagefile And Running Without One TweakHound
Forget that. With your kind of RAM there will never be any paging anyhow.
Thx for explaining well. One more question: If for example I decide to leave paging file on my SSD, but I never reach more than 16GB RAM limit, will system still write more on my SSD because of paging file enabled?
From what you said, I'll leave it disabled, cause I almost never reach limit of my RAM.
Do not disable it, and leave it on the SSD. Your SSD will not be damaged by having the paging file on it. It will only make things faster.
Some things will be written to the paging file regardless of memory utilization. Even if you theoretically had 1TB of RAM.
Don't worry about writing to your SSD, it will take years of heavy use before it wears out, and it will likely fail for other reasons first.