Blah it may work, but it would be ****ty. Thus proving the point that specs matter.
I find that statement neither convincing nor do I think it proves anything in that form:
a) What is your definition of ****ty
b) On what do you base your assessment that it would be ****ty
Is bumping the ram up to 512 would allow better operations and the addition of being able to add more apps, that's proving the point for us that say specs matter.
As Winning Guy mentioned, I never said specs don't matter. What I said is that RAM capacity plays almost no role in determining computational performance, which is what we have been discussing so far in this thread. Of course RAM has other specs (like bandwidth and latency) which do have an impact on computational performance, but you won't find that information on any consumer accessible smartphone spec-sheet (unfortunately).
I would recommend you look at it this way:
Computer technology is complicated. Really really complicated. If you aren't a software engineer or design integrated circuits, then you can safely assume you have no snowball's chance in **** of really understanding how hardware specs impact performance (or very vaguely at best). Under these circumstances, your only chance of determining what you are getting for your hard earned cash is to measure a devices performance using real apps and games (or benchmarking apps if that is all we've got).
It's not that specs don't matter. It's that most of us have no chance of correctly interpreting them. Furthermore, those specs you see on consumer oriented spec-sheets don't even list 1% of the specs you would need to accurately judge performance... the notion you could is nothing short of ridiculous.
Measuring performance is simply a much more reliable way of getting that information... much more reliable than trying to guess how a device might perform based on very sparse consumer oriented spec-sheets.