22-03-2009, 10:25
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#1
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Inactive
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Liverpool
Age: 38
Services: Sky+ TV and Virgin Media 10MB Internet.
Posts: 830
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Windows 7 RAM problem
I installed Windows 7 x64 onto my machine yesterday, but its saying only 3.25GB of my 4GB is useable. The machine specs I'm using are in my signature.
I was lead to believe that a 64-bit operating system could recognise above the 4GB mark? My old Windows Vista installation seemed to.
Here's a screen shot of the problem.
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22-03-2009, 15:16
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#2
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Inactive
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Essex
Services: Sky TV, VM 20Mb
Posts: 110
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Re: Windows 7 RAM problem
Is it just telling you that 0.75GB is already being used by background services and applications that you have running and so telling you that 3.25GB is available? one way to test that is to run afew applications and see it changes. Am just guessing on this one as haven't had the opportunity of playing around with windows 7.
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22-03-2009, 15:17
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#3
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Inactive
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Middlesbrough [TS10]
Age: 40
Services: TT Fibre Large 78mbit
Posts: 967
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Re: Windows 7 RAM problem
I'm not sure what's going on there.
My Windows 7 install picks up my RAM fine. What build are you running?
No smee, it's detecting RAM as though he's using a 32-bit OS. That measurement doesn't take into account whats in use, it should detect it all.
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22-03-2009, 15:47
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#4
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Inactive
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Essex
Services: Sky TV, VM 20Mb
Posts: 110
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Re: Windows 7 RAM problem
Hi have a look at this forum thread especially the last post very interesting:
http://www.neowin.net/forum/lofivers...p/t742730.html
---------- Post added at 16:47 ---------- Previous post was at 16:44 ----------
Also alot of people saying that Memory Remapping is required on 64-bit OS.
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22-03-2009, 16:13
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#5
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Guest
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Re: Windows 7 RAM problem
Have you ever installed a 64 bit OS before? My last mobo before this one limited me not the OS. P something DH deluxe
Edit read OP properly and you have
My P5Q pro has always seen 4 gig
Ive never come across anything like that screen shot before. My win 7 picks up all mine also
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22-03-2009, 16:47
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#6
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Inactive
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: on holiday by mistake
Age: 56
Services: Vivid 200, Full House, V6 x2
Posts: 5,977
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Re: Windows 7 RAM problem
I came across something like that a while ago with a 2003R2 (x64) box cobbled together to run vmware. It turned out to be down to the mobo not liking a 4x1GB RAM configuration. That was an Asus board but I can't remember exactly which one.
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22-03-2009, 18:15
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#7
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Inactive
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Middlesbrough [TS10]
Age: 40
Services: TT Fibre Large 78mbit
Posts: 967
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Re: Windows 7 RAM problem
Quote:
Originally Posted by smee init
Hi have a look at this forum thread especially the last post very interesting:
http://www.neowin.net/forum/lofivers...p/t742730.html
---------- Post added at 16:47 ---------- Previous post was at 16:44 ----------
Also alot of people saying that Memory Remapping is required on 64-bit OS.
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edit
Took a poop on myself and made a mistake
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22-03-2009, 18:23
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#8
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Inactive
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Liverpool
Age: 38
Services: Sky+ TV and Virgin Media 10MB Internet.
Posts: 830
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Re: Windows 7 RAM problem
I'm not at that computer again until the weekend probably.
I had Windows Vista x64 previously, and that detected all 4GB. (4x 1GB sticks) So it isn't a motherboard problem.
Could it be a dodgy copy of Windows 7? It's build 7042 or 7057. I downloaded it via RapidShare, since it's not available for public download any more.
I don't like the fact that Microsoft got rid of the Quick Launch. I loved that. (I know it is still available via new toolbar, but it isn't the same and can't contain a lot of shortcuts in the arrow expansion thing)
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23-03-2009, 14:40
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#9
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Inactive
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Middlesbrough [TS10]
Age: 40
Services: TT Fibre Large 78mbit
Posts: 967
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Re: Windows 7 RAM problem
Memory remapping is always active on newer boards, it comes as a standard so you are unable to disable it. If you run a 32-bit OS, it will automatically disable it for you.
If you look in Everest under the memory options, scroll to the bottom and it will tell you if PAE (Physical Address Extension) is active. That's just another name for Mem Remapping.
It should be active on a 64-bit OS by default.
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23-03-2009, 15:37
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#10
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Inactive
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Liverpool
Age: 38
Services: Sky+ TV and Virgin Media 10MB Internet.
Posts: 830
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Re: Windows 7 RAM problem
It says it is active.
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