Windows 9598seme Ram Limitation Patch
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Here is a YouTube video where someone managed to modify Windows 98 to recognize 2 GB of RAM (at least for all intents and purposes) by placing the virtual memory file (or swap file; basically WIN386.SWP) on a RAM drive. This to me is quite interesting, especially for LoneCrusader (that is, if he hasn't already broken the barrier himself by now, or known someone who did). So basically, it sees the extra RAM as another drive, on which the virtual memory happens to be stored. Any comments are welcome. Here is a YouTube video where someone managed to modify Windows 98 to recognize 2 GB of RAM (at least for all intents and purposes) by placing the virtual memory file (or swap file; basically WIN386.SWP) on a RAM drive. This to me is quite interesting, especially for LoneCrusader (that is, if he hasn't already broken the barrier himself by now, or known someone who did).
So basically, it sees the extra RAM as another drive, on which the virtual memory happens to be stored. Any comments are welcome.
(Assuming you all know that ALL 32-bit systems limit addressable RAM to 3.5 or 3 GB, depending on your motherboard.) How? The one and only. (Time-limited Demo version is available on that page.) _________________ Author of Author of. Here is a YouTube video where someone managed to modify Windows 98 to recognize 2 GB of RAM (at least for all intents and purposes) by placing the virtual memory file (or swap file; basically WIN386.SWP) on a RAM drive. This to me is quite interesting, especially for LoneCrusader (that is, if he hasn't already broken the barrier himself by now, or known someone who did). So basically, it sees the extra RAM as another drive, on which the virtual memory happens to be stored.
Any comments are welcome. (Assuming you all know that ALL 32-bit systems limit addressable RAM to 3.5 or 3 GB, depending on your motherboard.) How? The one and only. (Time-limited Demo version is available on that page.)I should have known you to have already broken the limit by now.
Win98SE with various patches can handle the full 32-bit memory space. It was artificially limited by Microsoft for stability purposes. My understanding of R.
The Windows 95/98/SE/ME RAM Limitation Patch Program patches Windows 95, 98, 98SE or ME to support Computers with more than 512MB of RAM. Unmodified Windows 95, 98, 98SE or ME can malfunction or crash when more than 512MB of RAM is present.
Lowe's patch is that it removes the limitation imposed by Microsoft. This all seems to occur within vmm32. You can actually give DOS access to the whole 32-bit memory space with a third party memory manager, like JEMM (). Granted, most applications will not see anything beyond the standard 'limit' of around 64mb, but it's nice to know such things exist for future-proofing DOS _________________ Need disks scanned in the USA? I have a Kryoflux, and am willing to help get your disks archived!
I also offer xbox and xbox 360 repair and modding services. PM me for details! Well, I for one can't really blame Microsoft much for placing in that 'limitation' in the first place - Windows 3.x and Windows 9x simply were not intended to be used with more than 512 MB of RAM. Back then, until the end of the decade, most systems had only about 48 MB of RAM at most, and even as recently as the early 2000s, I still knew of a number of systems that only had about 16 MB of RAM or less (we still had one system up to early 2002 that had only 8 MB of RAM, a 486 system which I'm now in the process of rebuilding, and we even still had a 386 system with the same amount of RAM, despite our other systems having 32 MB and 64 MB of RAM respectively). However, theoretically speaking, if Windows 9x had still been developed, then obviously, they would have made it more compatible with modern hardware (already, Windows Me had support for 'legacy-free PCs' as a top priority even during pre-release testing). A typical PC manufactured today has at least 2 GB of RAM, and rarely has less than 1 GB, and most systems in use at the moment have at least 512 MB of RAM installed at the absolute minimum. And for those like us who would like to see Windows 9x utilize modern capabilities, patches and workarounds such as the ones mentioned above are quite an interesting sight.