A memory leak has nothing to do with your hardware, its a bug in the software you are using. Thus, you can't do a thing about it: Only the programmers of the program can fix a memory leak.
Memory leaks are easily plugged: reboot and don't run the program again. If you got to run it, just reboot after you're done.
Windows 98 itself has memory leaks too, and also crappy memory management (you anti-NT people please don't even try to debate this one, as these are both FACTS, not opinions. :P). If you haven't reinstalled in say 6 months or so, that could be a cause for system slowdown...
Comments
Memory leaks are easily plugged: reboot and don't run the program again. If you got to run it, just reboot after you're done.
Windows 98 itself has memory leaks too, and also crappy memory management (you anti-NT people please don't even try to debate this one, as these are both FACTS, not opinions. :P). If you haven't reinstalled in say 6 months or so, that could be a cause for system slowdown...