I think the problem is one of settings.
Check your mother board specs to determine if there is an integrated video adapter.
If so, then your 4 gigs includes that adapter. If you subtract the amount of memory reserved for the adapter
your system should be OK.
The 4gig is the max for most mother boards. (4 slots of 1 gig ddr2)
If you physically had 30 gig (1gig, 0.5 gig time 2) you would be ok as well.
By the way. That is why I chose the latter 1.5 gig times 2) arrangement.
I did not need the memory as I have not seen my system ever use more then one gig total.
Date: Sat, 16 Feb 2008 16:06:25 -0600
From: Frank Cox <theatre@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: slow (s-l-o-w) install
To: For users of Fedora <fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
Message-ID: <20080216160625.d10086f4.theatre@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
On Sat, 16 Feb 2008 16:57:06 -0500
"Kevin J. Cummings" <cummings@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> So what happens if you tell the kernel there is slightly less than
4GB
> of ram? A simple test would be to tell the kernel you have 3GB of
RAM.
> If it runs fine, increase that number until it no longer runs fine.
It
> its only 64MB of RAM at the top of the memory map, can you tell the
> system you only have 4095MB of RAM?
I assumed that the bios bug meant that the last 64mb of however-much
ram you're
using over 2GB becomes the problem. However, I haven't tried what you
suggest
yet and will do so to see what happens. Thanks for the suggestion!
> This is an X86_64 capable CPU running in 64 bit mode, right? So you
> don't need a PAE kernel?
Correct.
--
MELVILLE THEATRE ~ Melville Sask ~ http://www.melvilletheatre.com
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