On 13/05/11 07:49, Tyler J. Wagner wrote:
On Fri, 2011-05-13 at 07:31 +0100, Hakan Koseoglu wrote:
Each process will be still limited to a max of 4GB therefore if your aim
is to use more than that inside a process, 64 bit is the better choice.
Each process is limited to a max of 2 GB, not 4 GB
On Fri, 2011-05-13 at 07:31 +0100, Hakan Koseoglu wrote:
> Each process will be still limited to a max of 4GB therefore if your aim
> is to use more than that inside a process, 64 bit is the better choice.
Each process is limited to a max of 2 GB, not 4 GB. The maximum
addressable space for a 32-
On 12/05/11 21:17, Avi wrote:
Ubuntu ships with PAE support (as do most distros - the kernel's
supported it for ever, too), so any 32bit Ubuntu install will be able to
address 64GB by default.
Each process will be still limited to a max of 4GB therefore if your aim
is to use more than that insid
As per the meeting the other day, there is a plan to go see the SciFi
exhibition at the British Library in London at some point in July/August. If
all goes to plan, we'll all head off for a geeknic in a nice green bit
nearby afterwards, and maybe other bits and bobs too depending who feels
like wha
Paul Morgan-Roach wrote:
AFAIK you need to use a 64 bit OS / CPU to use more than 4Gb RAM
Only with Windows, and that's a licensing rather than technical restriction.
'plain' 32bit x86 can address 4GB of memory.
32bit x86 with PAE (which is about the last ten years' worth) can
address 64GB o
You're sort-of right -- I've got it working, now, by booting my Mac into the
64 bit Kernel.
Cheers,
Doug.
On 12 May 2011 17:15, Paul Morgan-Roach wrote:
>
> > On 11 May at 1:15, doug livesey wrote:
> >
> > > Hi -- so this is being typed from an Ubuntu VM under Mac OSX. I've
> > > given up th
> On 11 May at 1:15, doug livesey wrote:
>
> > Hi -- so this is being typed from an Ubuntu VM under Mac OSX. I've
> > given up the hope of dual-booting for now -- maybe I'll try again
> > sometime later with 10.04. However, I have 8 gig RAM on my MBP, yet
> > seem only to be able to assign less th