this post was submitted on 04 May 2026
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No.
No.
No.
You seem very confused about what RAM is and what's happening here. You seem to think that RAM is something you make on your computer. It's a physical part of your computer that you load information into.
Imagine you're sitting at a desk in an office. The desk has little shelves where you can put documents you're working on. You can only put a small number of files there. The office has filing cabinets where other files are kept that you're not working on. You can store a lot in there but it takes time to go find it. You also have some special filing cabinets that are still slow but you only use it to store files temporarily that someone brings you from another office, or when you run out of space on your desk but still need to keep files handy.
In this analogy, the shelves on the desk is RAM. You only put the stuff you're immediately working on in those shelves because of the limited space, but it's really fast to find stuff compared to the filling cabinets, which are your hard drive. When you go on a website, like YouTube, you're calling someone in an office in another building and asking them for some files. They send over a bunch of files, which takes a really long time. You put a much as possible in your desk shelves to use right now, but anything that doesn't fit you put in one of those special filing cabinets, which will call the cache, which is slow, but not nearly as slow as waiting for the files to come from the other office. When you're ready for the extra files from YouTube, you just grab them from the cache.
What's happening in this problem with youtube is that you request the files from them, they send them over, along with instructions on how to use them. The instructions say something that requires putting a bunch of things in RAM. At first this is normal. But at some point the instructions start repeating and tell you to put more and more files into RAM, maybe even repeats of files you already have there, shouldn't need again. But you just follow instructions, that's your job. So you keep loading things into RAM, but then there's no room left and your system falls apart and you can no longer do any work. Until you close youtube and chuck all the youtube files out of RAM.
Hopefully that makes it clear why you can't outsource RAM. Essentially you would be putting your little desk shelves in a different office, but we already have a better solution than that: the cache or special local filing cabinet on your hard drive.
What we outsource normally is the hard drive (filing cabinets) and call it cloud storage (for example), and the creation and processing of information (done by the CPU, GPU, or other chips on your computer) and call it cloud computing (for example). That's because those things are slow, and the extra time to move the files between offices isn't necessarily the bottleneck.