[ltp] SIMPLE QUESTIONS -Reply
Chris Hoekstra
chris at hoekstra.com
Thu Apr 17 19:53:17 CEST 2003
Just a quick update for anyone who is curious,
The memtest86 ran for just under 6 hours, made 5 passes at the memory,
and didn't find a single error! Strange that Win98 (through 3 different
installs) exhibits regular lockups with the additional memory in, but
yet doesn't ever lock without the memory in it.
However, the good news is, since I switched this laptop over to linux,
it has been running quite stable now with the extra memory in it. Hmm,
strange, but I'll take it.
Chris
Chris Hoekstra wrote:
> Ahh, this is great stuff!
> I downloaded the cdrom .iso image and first tried it on my main
> desktop machine and it worked great. Just out of pure interest, here
> is some comparison numbers:
> AMD 1600, 512Mb DDR266 (PC2100) memory
> L1 Cache: 128k 8551 Mb/sec
> L2 Cache: 256k 2838 Mb/sec
> Memory: 512Mb 625 Mb/sec
>
> Then I tried to boot the cd on my laptop DVD drive (which DOES support
> bootable cd's, but there are some that don't work for some reason) and
> it just gave me a black screen with repeating 8000's on each line. No
> biggie, the floppy version worked just dandy. Here are the specs for
> my Thinkpad 770z:
> Intel PII-366 1 at 64Mb IBM, 2 at 128Mb Viking PC100
> L1 Cache: 32k 3567 Mb/sec
> L2 Cache: 256k 935 Mb/sec
> Memory: 319Mb 175 Mb/sec
>
> Tests are running now to find out if there are errors in the memory.
>
> Thanks again for recommending a solution. This should help out.
>
> Chris
>
> Ross Patterson wrote:
>
>> On Wednesday 16 April 2003 11:43 am, Chris Hoekstra wrote:
>>
>>
>>> Has anyone else had any problem with generic laptop memory?
>>
>>
>> Yes. We have a small pile of ThinkPads here, a mix of 600s, As and
>> Ts. We've been very happy with name-brand non-IBM memory (e..g
>> Crucial.Com aka Micron), and we've had all sorts of problems with
>> no-brand memory. Problems like random lockups, boot failures, etc.
>> We used memtest86 (http://www.memtest86.com/) to check the DIMMs, and
>> that was the deciding factor - the no-brand ones failed all sorts of
>> tests.
>> We now run tests on all memory we get in, and Crucial.Com always
>> passes all tests. We don't pay much more than for no-brand, and
>> we're much happier.
>>
>>
>
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