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Punja akumulatora Cars-Pro EBC4000 6/12V 4A

Proizvoa: Pro-User
Cena:
Internet cena: 3.600,00 DIN
Rejting Jo uvek neocenjen
Opis
Proizvoa: Pro-User - Nemaka
Model: EBC4000
Napon punjenja: 6 / 12V
Max. struja punjenja: 0.8(6V) / 0,8 - 4A(12V)
Potpuno automatski reim rada, bez mogunosti prepunjavanja ispravnog akumulatora
Aktivna zatita protiv varnienja u sluaju kratkog spoja, pogrenog vezivanja!
Ugraen LCD displej sa pozadinskim osvetljenjem za kontrolu svih funkcija punjaa!
Idealan za auto, moto akumulatore, baterije kapaciteta od 1,2Ah do 100Ah
Duina oba kabla (mreni i prikljuni) su po 1.85m.
Vodootporno kuite - IP65 zatita
Mogunost punjenja svih vrsta akumulatore (sa odravanjem, bez odravanja, GEL, AGM, VRLA...)
Garantni rok: 25 meseca

Teina
0.5 kg
Duina 195 mm
irina 68 mm
Visina 47 mm

read lots of articles about the best way to measure and manage the
physical memory on your system. Much of it is well-meaning but just
wrong. To help cut through the confusion, I've put together a tutorial
and accompanying gallery that explains how to make the most of your
memory.

Windows memory management is rocket science. And don't believe anyone


who tells you otherwise. counter in Perfmon to keep an eye on memory
usage. (In Windows 7, you can still do that, as I've done in the gallery here.)
The trouble is, Committed Bytes has only the most casual relationship to
actual usage of the physical memory in your PC. As Microsoft developer
Brandon Paddock noted in his blog recently, the Committed Bytes counter
represents:
The total amount of virtual memory which Windows has promised could be
backed by either physical memory or the page file.

An important word there is "could." Windows establishes a "commit limit"


based on your available physical memory and page file size(s). When a
section of virtual memory is marked as "commit" - Windows counts it against
that commit limit regardless of whether it's actually being used.
On a typical Windows 7 system, the amount of memory represented by the
Committed Bytes counter is often well in excess of the actual installed RAM,
but that shouldn't have an effect on performance. In the scenarios I
demonstrate here, with roughly 1 GB of physical RAM available, the
Committed Bytes counter never dropped below about 650 MB, even though
physical RAM in use was as low as 283 MB at one point. And ironically, on the
one occasion when Windows legitimately used almost all available physical
RAM, using a little more than 950 MB of the 1023 MB available, the
Committed Bytes counter remained at only 832 MB.

So why is watching Committed Bytes important? You want to make sure that
the amount of committed bytes never exceeds the commit limit. If that
happens regularly, you need either a bigger page file, more physical memory,
or both.

Watching the color-coded Physical Memory bar graph on the Memory tab of
Resource Monitor is by far the best way to see exactly what Windows 7 is up
to at any given time. Here, from left to right, is what you'll see:
Hardware Reserved (gray) This is physical memory that is set aside by the
BIOS and other hardware drivers (especially graphics adapters). This memory
cannot be used for processes or system functions.

In Use (green) The memory shown here is in active use by the Windows
kernel, by running processes, or by device drivers. This is the number that
matters above all others. If you consistently find this green bar filling the entire
length of the graph, you're trying to push your physical RAM beyond its
capacity.

Modified (orange) This represents pages of memory that can be used by


other programs but would have to be written to the page file before they can
be reused.

Standby (blue) Windows 7 tries as hard as it can to keep this cache of


memory as full as possible. In XP and earlier, the Standby list was basically a
dumb first-in, first-out cache. Beginning with Windows Vista and continuing
with Windows 7, the memory manager is much smarter about the Standby list,
prioritizing every page on a scale of 0 to 7 and reusing low-priority pages
ahead of high-priority ones. (Another Russinovich article, Inside the Windows
Vista Kernel: Part 2, explains this well. Look for the "Memory Priorities"
section.) If you start a new process that needs memory, the lowest-priority
pages on this list are discarded and made available to the new process.

Free (light blue) As you'll see if you step through the entire gallery, Windows
tries its very best to avoid leaving any memory at all free. If you find yourself
with a big enough chunk of memory here, you can bet that Windows will do its
best to fill itby copying data from the disk and adding the new pages to the
Standby list, based primarily on its SuperFetch measurements. As
Russinovich notes, this is done at a rate of a few pages per second with Very
Low priority I/Os, so it shouldn't interfere with performance.
In short, Windows 7 (unlike XP and earlier Windows versions) goes by the
philosophy that empty RAM is wasted RAM and tries to keep it as full as
possible, without impacting performance.

Questions? Comments? Leave them in the Talkback section and I'll answer
them in a follow-up post or two.

founded in 2009 and surpassed The Pirate Bay in traffic last year. Battling
various censorship efforts the site has burned through a few different domain
names over the years. Most recently it switched to a Costa Rican .cr domainafter
it lost its Somalian .so address.

ALEXA RANK: 85 / LAST YEAR #1

2. THE PIRATE BAY

The Pirate Bay is one of the main piracy icons. The torrent site wasnt online at
the beginning of 2015 and had to deal with a staff revolt. However, it quickly
regained millions of users after a successful comeback operating from a hydra of
domain names until last week.

ALEXA RANK: NA / COMPETE RANK: NA / LAST YEAR #4

3. EXTRATORRENT

ExtraTorrent continues to gain more traffic and has become one of the most
active torrent communities. The site is also the home of the popular ETTV and
ETRG release groups.

ALEXA RANK: 342 / LAST YEAR #3

4. TORRENTZ

(Update August 2016: Torrentz has shut down)


Torrentz has been the leading BitTorrent meta-search engine for many years.
Unlike the other sites featured in the list Torrentz does not host any torrent files
or magnet links, but redirects visitors to other places on the web. The site uses
several domain names with .eu being the most popular.
ALEXA RANK: 351 / LAST YEAR #2

5. RARBG

RARBG, which started out as a Bulgarian tracker, was last years newcomer and
continues to rake in more visitors. The site was blocked by UK ISPs last year,
which put it on par with most other sites in the top 10.

ALEXA RANK: 1,101 / LAST YEAR #7

6. 1337X

1337x has traditionally been a community driven torrent site but several weeks
ago most of the admins and moderators abandoned ship over security concerns.
The coming year it will become clear whether 1337x can keep its popular status.

ALEXA RANK: 1,249 / LAST YEAR #9

7. EZTV.AG
TV-torrent distribu

Since Windows 7 was released last October I've read lots of articles about the
right and wrong way to measure and manage the physical memory on your
system. Much of it is well-meaning but just wrong.

It doesn't help that the topic is filled with jargon and technical terminology that
you literally need a CS degree to understand. Even worse, web searches turn
up mountains of misinformation, some of it on Microsoft's own web sites. And
then there's the fact that Windows memory management has evolved,
radically, over the past decade. Someone who became an expert on
measuring memory usage using Windows 2000 might have been able to
muddle through with Windows XP, but he would be completely flummoxed by
the changes that began in Windows Vista (and its counterpart, Windows
Server 2008) and have continued in Windows 7 (and its counterpart, Windows
Server 2008 R2).

To help cut through the confusion, I've taken a careful look at memory usage
on a handful of Windows 7 systems here, with installed RAM ranging from 1
GB to 10 GB. The behavior in all cases is strikingly similar and consistent,
although you can get a misleading picture depending on which of three built-in
performance monitoring tools you use. What helped me understand exactly
what was going on with Windows 7 and RAM was to arrange all three of these
tools side by side and then begin watching how each one responded as I
increased and decreased the workload on the system.

To see all three memory-monitoring tools at work, be sure to step


through the screen shot gallery I created here: How to measure
Windows 7 memory usage.

Here are the three tools I used:

Task Manager You can open Task Manager by pressing Ctrl+Shift+Esc (or
press Ctrl+Alt+Delete, then click Start Task Manager). For someone who
learned how to read memory usage in Windows XP, the Performance tab will
be familiar, but the data is presented very differently. The most important
values to look at are under the Physical Memory heading, where Total tells
you how much physical memory is installed (minus any memory in use by the
BIOS or devices) and Available tells you how much memory you can
immediately use for a new process.
Performance Monitor This is the old-school Windows geek's favorite tool.
(One big advantage it has over the others is that you can save To run it, click
start, type perfmon, and press Enter. To use it, you must create a custom
layout by adding "counters" that track resource usage over time. The number
of available counters, broken into more than 100 separate categories, is
enormous; in Windows 7 you can choose from more than 35 counters under
the Memory heading alone, measuring things like Transition Pages
RePurposed/sec. For this exercise, I configured Perfmon to show Committed
Bytes and Available Bytes. The latter is the same as the Available figure in
Task Manager. I'll discuss Committed Bytes in more detail later.

Resource Monitor The easy way to open this tool is by clicking the button at
the bottom of the Performance tab in Task Manager. Resource Manager was
introduced in Windows Vista, but it has been completely overhauled for
Windows 7 and displays an impressive amount of data, drawn from the exact
same counters as Perfmon without requiring you to customize anything. The
Memory tab shows how your memory is being used, with detailed information
for each process and a colorful Physical Memory bar graph to show exactly
what's happening with your memory. I believe this is by far the best tool for
understanding at a glance where your memory is being used.

You can go through the entire gallery to see exactly how each tool works. I
ran these tests on a local virtual machine, using 1 GB of RAM as a worst-case
scenario. If you have more RAM than that, the basic principles will be the
same, but you'll probably see more Available memory under normal usage
scenarios. As you'll see in the gallery, I went from a
MORGAN MARIE
ifra proizvoda: M1222SM

Pol enski

Mehanizam Kvarcni

Materijal Metal

Narukvica Metal

Vodootpornost 3 bara
Dimenzije 31 mm
kuita

Staklo Mineralno

Uputstvo-za-ANALOGNI-KVARCNI-SAT.pd
MORGAN STEPHANIE
ifra proizvoda: M1189W

Pol enski

Mehanizam Kvarcni

Materijal elik

Narukvica Koa

Vodootpornost 3 bara
Dimenzije 38 mm
kuita

Staklo Mineralno
Uputstvo za ANALOGNI KVARCNI SAT

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