Definition
RAM allocation flexibility refers to the ability of a system or specific applications to dynamically adjust the amount of Random Access Memory (RAM) dedicated to different components or tasks, such as system memory versus graphics memory (VRAM).
Why it matters (in Poovi’s context)
The ROG Flow Z13’s capacity to allocate significant portions of its large RAM pool (up to 128GB) to graphics memory is highlighted as a major advantage for demanding creative and AI workloads, offering more VRAM than many dedicated GPUs.
Key properties or components
- Variable Graphics Memory
- Custom RAM allocation
- System vs. VRAM split
- High-capacity RAM support
Contradictions or debates
None.