Misha Posted November 13, 2006 Share Posted November 13, 2006 I am confused about somenthing, the total amount of phyiscal memory that Windows XP Pro. can address is supposed to be 4gb. Now the confusing part to me is, is that ram only? My system consists of 4gb of ram, 2gb video ram, 2 meg L2 cache, and what ever memory the Creativelabs XFI plat. has on it. Is there too much memory for windows to address correctly? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lost Soul Posted November 13, 2006 Share Posted November 13, 2006 I am confused about somenthing, the total amount of phyiscal memory that Windows XP Pro. can address is supposed to be 4gb. Now the confusing part to me is, is that ram only? My system consists of 4gb of ram, 2gb video ram, 2 meg L2 cache, and what ever memory the Creativelabs XFI plat. has on it. Is there too much memory for windows to address correctly?naa its only pertaining to system ram, as for video ram and so forth, they run on a seperate chip Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Misha Posted November 13, 2006 Author Share Posted November 13, 2006 Thank You. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
uvmain Posted November 30, 2006 Share Posted November 30, 2006 (edited) sorry for replying to a really old post, but..what the hell hardware gives you 2gigs video ram?I want one My system consists of 4gb of ram, 2gb video ram, 2 meg L2 Edited November 30, 2006 by uvmain Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Maleko Posted November 30, 2006 Share Posted November 30, 2006 the only ones ive seen at GF8800 with 768MB...so in SLI that gives you 1536MB....clostest ive seen so far to 2Gb... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nerwin Posted November 30, 2006 Share Posted November 30, 2006 (edited) No, you can get 2 of this: http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/Se...678&CatId=0 Edited November 30, 2006 by computerMan Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Maleko Posted November 30, 2006 Share Posted November 30, 2006 but its ATI..lol, j/k Yeh Im a Nvidia man...anyway, dunno why anyone needs 2GB, even 1GB of video memory atm.... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nitroshift Posted November 30, 2006 Share Posted November 30, 2006 No, you can get 2 of this: http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/Se...678&CatId=0Holy smoke!!!!! I want one! (No money to buy though...) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jcarle Posted November 30, 2006 Share Posted November 30, 2006 Total available RAM to XP is equal to 4GB - (Total RAM of cards, bios, roms). If you have a 512MB video card with 4GB of system ram, you will only have 3.5GB available in Windows XP. There's a large article on [H]ard|Forum that explains the problem in depth. Also, here's an official microsoft doc about it too.There are two ways around that problem. Run Windows XP 64-Bit (or another 64-bit OS like Vista) on 64-Bit hardware OR run Windows XP 32-Bit using PAE (Physical Address Extension) on Intel PAE compatible hardware (CPU + motherboard). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
uvmain Posted November 30, 2006 Share Posted November 30, 2006 Total available RAM to XP is equal to 4GB - (Total RAM of cards, bios, roms). If you have a 512MB video card with 4GB of system ram, you will only have 3.5GB available in Windows XP. There's a large article on [H]ard|Forum that explains the problem in depth. Also, here's an official microsoft doc about it too.There are two ways around that problem. Run Windows XP 64-Bit (or another 64-bit OS like Vista) on 64-Bit hardware OR run Windows XP 32-Bit using PAE (Physical Address Extension) on Intel PAE compatible hardware (CPU + motherboard).that only happens if you have gart drivers.. ie an AGP card doesn't happen with PCI-E, because pci-e doesn't use gart.. it allows the grfx card to access windows ram, but it is shared and only when necessary. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jcarle Posted November 30, 2006 Share Posted November 30, 2006 that only happens if you have gart drivers.. ie an AGP card doesn't happen with PCI-E, because pci-e doesn't use gart.. it allows the grfx card to access windows ram, but it is shared and only when necessary.Sorry, but it DOES occur with PCI-Express video cards as well. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jeremy Posted December 1, 2006 Share Posted December 1, 2006 (edited) but its ATI..lol, j/k Yeh Im a Nvidia man...Not another fan boy... No, you can get 2 of this: http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/Se...678&CatId=0What a bloody waste of money. I really feel sorry for people out there who think they can only be happy with something like that. Hell, I'm using a GeForce 6800GS and HL2, BF2, FEAR, COD2, Oblivion, I've had good framerates on all of them."OMFG, where's my 150 FPS!?""60 FPS is smooth. Start appreciating what you've got. Edited December 1, 2006 by Jeremy Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Maleko Posted December 2, 2006 Share Posted December 2, 2006 "OMFG, where's my 150 FPS!?""60 FPS is smooth. Start appreciating what you've got.Totally agree with you! IMO, 60 is brilliant, and 30 is still perfectly playable! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LLXX Posted December 2, 2006 Share Posted December 2, 2006 The physical address space of the IA32 architecture is 4Gb, but the upper 1Gb is usually reserved for memory-mapped I/O, leaving 3Gb of RAM available.Above 3Gb you'll need PAE as alluded to above.Video memory is not directly addressable to the CPU, only to the GPU. The graphics card maps an aperture into the upper 1Gb; that aperture may be the size of the entire VRAM if there is sufficient space, or only a portion of it if there is large amounts of VRAM.Total available RAM to XP is equal to 4GB - (Total RAM of cards, bios, roms). If you have a 512MB video card with 4GB of system ram, you will only have 3.5GB available in Windows XPThis is partially correct. With PAE enabled you will have access to the entire 4Gb of RAM, the 512Mb of VRAM doesn't affect anything as it's probably going to be mapped somewhere in the now-64Gb physical address space. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jcarle Posted December 2, 2006 Share Posted December 2, 2006 Total available RAM to XP is equal to 4GB - (Total RAM of cards, bios, roms). If you have a 512MB video card with 4GB of system ram, you will only have 3.5GB available in Windows XPThis is partially correct. With PAE enabled you will have access to the entire 4Gb of RAM, the 512Mb of VRAM doesn't affect anything as it's probably going to be mapped somewhere in the now-64Gb physical address space.I wasn't quite clear, but that was what I meant, I was refering to 3.5GB available without the use of PAE.I would imagine that performance would be better using a true 64 bit memory map vs using PAE? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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