4 comments

  • Cockbrand57 minutes ago
    Around the turn of the millennium I had a Sony Vaio 505TX, which had the same chipset. My machine was running Linux, and I maxed it out to 128MB RAM.<p>There was a kernel patch for this chipset back then, which treated all memory above the lower 64MB as a RAM disk, which could then be used as swap space.<p>This prioritized the faster portion of RAM while still having very fast swapping.
  • HerbManic44 minutes ago
    It is funny to see how these older machines perform at their higher end limits. I&#x27;m guessing the idea on this was that if you needed that much RAM, the sacrifice of L2 cache was a worth while trade off.<p>It was only a few weeks ago that I found out the original BeBOX computers would switch off L2 cache when running in dual CPU mode. It was just a limitation of the memory controller. Again, the thinking of, if you need the extra compute over memory bus it would be a worth while trade off.
  • hsbauauvhabzb59 minutes ago
    Many modern apps seem to cache based on total ram installed, and don’t seem to scale well to larger than normal systems. Chrome, I’m looking at you.
  • MrBuddyCasino1 hour ago
    My 1997 mainboard had extensible tag-ram, if I remember correctly. Perhaps this is the issue?