I highly doubt that people who work on cellphone software would screw up on RAM usage optimization as badly as Microsoft. I could see problems for people who already push the hardware to its limit on Gingerbread with one single piece of software that would normally require a hardware upgrade, but not otherwise. Still, with the typical RAM usage of desktop OSs and applications* in mind, I would tend to think that 512MB of RAM would be enough for a phone OS where it is highly uncommon to run two RAM-hungry softs simultaneously. I wish sony would just say something along the lines of “the base ICS install typically eats up * MB RAM more than the base GB install ?” It was announced alongside the Nokia Asha 205 in November 2012 and was first released in January 2013. But from that point of view, with a barely tweaked stock ROM, I already have less than 380MB of RAM available. 4,699 See more prices Performance Single Core, 1 GHz Unisoc T107 48 MB RAM Display 2.8 inches (7.11 cm) 143 PPI, TFT Camera 0.3 MP Primary Camera LED Flash Battery 1450 mAh Micro-USB Port Removable + Compare 128 MB See Full Specifications 'The most popular phone priced around Rs. Nokia 206 is an entry level dual-SIM mobile phone from Nokia. I’m not sure what you mean by that, but I have noticed that the default Gingerbread RAM monitor hides the RAM usage of some software, mostly the base OS and some bundled applications (like the web browser), leaving only ~300-350MB of visible RAM, so I guess that this is what you are talking about. The 2011 Xperia phones only have ~380 MB of RAM available to Android/user-apps
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