Just bought the T61p with 4gb ram and it would be nice to have use of it
Also, this machine is supposed to have a 100gb/7200 hd but windows only show 86,4
Otherwise very happy with my new toy's performance...

Vista x64 (64 Bit) will use all of your 4GB of memory, as will pretty much any of the other 64 bit operating systems.goran5 wrote:Can't believe that a the newest os from ms is not able to handle more than 3gb ram.
You will never get 100GB of actual data capacity from a drive which the drive manufacturers label as 100GB.... and that is the case for any operating system. There are many messages here and on other places on the Intenrnet which explain exactly what that is the case.goran5 wrote:Also, this machine is supposed to have a 100gb/7200 hd but windows only show 86,4.
because 10 G of diskspace is used for the recovery partition.goran5 wrote:Can't believe that a the newest os from ms is not able to handle more than 3gb ram. Isn't there a workaround or is it coming with the sp1?
Just bought the T61p with 4gb ram and it would be nice to have use of it![]()
Also, this machine is supposed to have a 100gb/7200 hd but windows only show 86,4![]()
Otherwise very happy with my new toy's performance...
Is this the SERVICEV0001 partion (FAT32) listed next to the Preload C: drive when you right click My Computer, and then select Manage, and Disk Management? If so, why is mine only ~1 GB and not 10 Gb?madcow wrote:because 10 G of diskspace is used for the recovery partition.goran5 wrote:Can't believe that a the newest os from ms is not able to handle more than 3gb ram. Isn't there a workaround or is it coming with the sp1?
Just bought the T61p with 4gb ram and it would be nice to have use of it![]()
Also, this machine is supposed to have a 100gb/7200 hd but windows only show 86,4![]()
Otherwise very happy with my new toy's performance...
SP1 under vista 32 can see all 4GB but because it's a 32-bit OS, it cannot address more than 3GB. i need to update the above sticky to address this point.goran5 wrote:Can't believe that a the newest os from ms is not able to handle more than 3gb ram. Isn't there a workaround or is it coming with the sp1?
as the sticky says above, you need a 36-bit OS (server 2003) or a 64-bit OS (XP x64 or vista x64). there is no other workaround.goran5 wrote:Just bought the T61p with 4gb ram and it would be nice to have use of it

Roadster wrote:snip.....Is this the SERVICEV0001 partion (FAT32) listed next to the Preload C: drive when you right click My Computer, and then select Manage, and Disk Management? If so, why is mine only ~1 GB and not 10 Gb?....snip
Thanks for your response. I'll try to clarify.ryengineer wrote:(long quote snipped)


I guess that would be pretty important. Is there any way to verify that I can do this on my machine (e.g., trial run)?ryengineer wrote:As long as you can boot into service partition and restore your machine from Predesktop console, don't worry about the size.

Backup your important data on an external media and then initiate the restore process.Roadster wrote:I guess that would be pretty important. Is there any way to verify that I can do this on my machine (e.g., trial run)?
OK, then now can the 2nd apps use the remaining 2Gb entirely?erik wrote:32-bit apps can use up to 2GB each regardless of OS. this has been a limitation since windows 95.Kel Ghu wrote:If we use windows server 2003 (36bits), we get all 4Gb usable, but do 32bits apps/games take advantage of the entire 4Gb?

I don't see why not, as long as the OS sees and can address all 4gb it can assign it.Kel Ghu wrote:OK, then now can the 2nd apps use the remaining 2Gb entirely?erik wrote: 32-bit apps can use up to 2GB each regardless of OS. this has been a limitation since windows 95.
Samuel Adams wrote:The natural liberty of man is to be free from any superior power on Earth, and not to be under the will or legislative authority of man, but only to have the law of nature for his rule.
If it was binary math, 32bits applications would be limited to 4Gb. 2^32=4Gb.tylerwylie wrote:I don't see why not, as long as the OS sees and can address all 4gb it can assign it.Kel Ghu wrote: OK, then now can the 2nd apps use the remaining 2Gb entirely?
It's just binary math for 32 bit applications to be limited to 2gb.

Samuel Adams wrote:The natural liberty of man is to be free from any superior power on Earth, and not to be under the will or legislative authority of man, but only to have the law of nature for his rule.
it does. 2003 supports 'memory hoisting' and can push the last 1GB above the 4GB address range if the chipset supports this feature.Kel Ghu wrote:2003 does, but it's not 32 bits, it's 36bits... So maybe the memory above 3Gb is not in the 32bits addressing range.
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