Why is there limits on the amount of RAM you can install (Think its about 4igs on new comps) What if you installed 5 gigs what would happen?
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question on RAM
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Re: question on RAM
Given that most motherboards only have a maximum of four ram slots and that I have yet to see a ram stick with more than one Gb specs I think that it would be a bit tough to install 5 Gb. Aside from that the limitation is prolly built into the chipset and/or bios and a larger amount of memory than spec would either not be recognized or woould cause the system to crash.Antec 900 case (4 120mm and 1 200mm lighted fans + UFO flashing light set + 2 12" and 1 6" Mutant Mods meteor lights) - Aerogate ll thermal controller - Asus M2N-e SLI - AMD 64 X2 AM2 6400+ - Corsair TX650 PSU - MSI 450GTS Cyclone OC - 2 X 2GB Patriot Extreme Performance PC2 6400 RAM - SATA 320 GB Seagate HD, SATA 300GB Maxtor HD and IDE 80 GB Samsung HD - Floppy Drive/Card Reader Combo - LG SuperMulti Lightscribe 18x DVD RW - Plextor PX-716A DVD r/rw - Windows 7 Home Premium 64
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Re: question on RAM
It's because a 32-bit processor cannot address more than 4GBs (2 to the 32nd power) of RAM on it's own. You can have more on a multi-CPU system or a 64-bit system running 64-bit software (e.g. Windows XP 64-bit). It's still 4GB per CPU on a multi-32-bit-CPU system, but the limit is the number of slots and the size of DIMMs for 64-bit systems (as well as how much RAM the software can handle). This is actually why 64-bit was a necessary advancement when it came out.
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