![]() ![]() ![]() I got suckered into trying one of the memory/system managers one time. GW2K, DELL, and other OEM's wrote bios code to prevent users from going beyond effective theoretical limits of the cacheing ability of a VX/TX/HX board. For example, you could stick 128 meg of RAM in a TX chipset board, but it would only effectively use 64 of it. No matter how much excellent or high-end hardware you have, you are limited by the ability of the OS and the memory contorller chipset to fully utilize that memory heap. Memory in Windows 9x always being cached and exchanged/swapped. Yes, but the Cachaman also does the same thing with respect to returning memory for use and effectively helping Windows manage its own memory heap. ![]()
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