Omega Oska Posted August 27, 2006 Posted August 27, 2006 If you look at the down right corner you see that I have used 348K out of 964K, and the fact is ...I should have 768MB RAM. I have been experiencing very unstable usage, even just browsing with IE, not to mention gaming....someone has an experience like this?
Guest IguanaKing Posted August 27, 2006 Posted August 27, 2006 Hi Omega Oska, When you first turn your computer on, how much memory does your BIOS say you have? If it also says you only have 964K, then you should try removing, and then re-inserting your RAM sticks. If that doesn't fix it, then you may need to get new RAM. Most of the time though, a simple re-seating of the RAM sticks will solve the problem. Its so weird that you are having this problem, because our chief inspector where I work had the same problem with his last week. We opened it up and re-seated the RAM sticks...no more problems. :D Don't touch the chips on the sticks or the heat spreader right after shutting down. They will be quite hot. Good luck.
Pilotasso Posted August 27, 2006 Posted August 27, 2006 Ram sticks malfunctions happen all the time. I had 2 occasions myself. You might consider buyin new memory, take advantage of that and get 2 GIG's. RAM is cheap these days and it realy makes a big difference. Hi Omega Oska, When you first turn your computer on, how much memory does your BIOS say you have? If it also says you only have 964K, then you should try removing, and then re-inserting your RAM sticks. If that doesn't fix it, then you may need to get new RAM. Most of the time though, a simple re-seating of the RAM sticks will solve the problem. Its so weird that you are having this problem, because our chief inspector where I work had the same problem with his last week. We opened it up and re-seated the RAM sticks...no more problems. :D Don't touch the chips on the sticks or the heat spreader right after shutting down. They will be quite hot. Good luck. Unless he kicked the case, its more likely to be a malfunction, and BIOS might still report every KB as OK anyway. Removing one memory stick at a time will tell wich one is broken. .
Guest IguanaKing Posted August 27, 2006 Posted August 27, 2006 Not true, Pilotasso. An improperly installed RAM stick can work fine for months or even years, then all of a sudden it quits. Corrosion is a b***h when dealing in an area where milivolts make or break the success of the system. Removing one at a time will work just fine, unless he has a pre-DDR or RAMBUS type of system. Then removal of one will just cause his BIOS to make angry beeps at him and never even enter the POST. :smilewink:
Pilotasso Posted August 27, 2006 Posted August 27, 2006 well, both my cases werent corrosion and BIOS still reported all KB's when removing 1 stick solved the ramdom crash and blue screen bootups. .
Guest IguanaKing Posted August 27, 2006 Posted August 27, 2006 OK...but removing a stick may not work for him, since we don't know what type of system he has. :smilewink: Our CIs computer is pre-DDR, and its running XP. Pull one stick and the computer doesn't do squat. Heh...I'm just in the habit of starting with the simplest possible solution. :D I could spend hours waiting for a "garbled Tx" problem to show on a COM, or I could just use a little nevr-dull on the pilot's brass headset connectors. :smilewink:
hitman Posted August 27, 2006 Posted August 27, 2006 Good ol' pc133 ram. If it wasnt for pc133 we'd still have ram from back in the 70s where the memory chip was bigger than todays motherboards and only 7kb at best.
WhiskeyRomeo Posted August 27, 2006 Posted August 27, 2006 can we see a screenshot from the Performance Tab of Task Manager? In the Physical Memory box add the Total and System cache. Does that add up to your 964K? My Task Manager shows 332M/4819M
Omega Oska Posted August 28, 2006 Author Posted August 28, 2006 Reinserting the sticks give me no luck. However the glitch is occasional. Right now my PC is working fine but then the next second it would tell me that I have not enough resources and all sort of crap. Well, I don't really know what type of board or RAM I am using......but my spec is : AMD 64 3400+ 768MB RAM GeforceMX400 Just captured a shot of my performace tab, sorry that it is in Chinese, but I think the placement of the relevant data should be the same in the English version.
hitman Posted August 28, 2006 Posted August 28, 2006 Ok. If your willing to spend about 300 bucks, Ill tell you to buy a new motherboard (939 pin I believe), new ram (1 gig pc3200), a power supply for a new geforce pci-e 6600, and a pci-e 6600. http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?Item=N82E16813157087 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?Item=N82E16817159055 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?Item=N82E16820227126 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?Item=N82E16814133154 I looked for the cheapest. All that adds up to 317 and some change, and I didnt count shipping. If not, just go out and buy the ram, if ANYTHING. 1 gig for under $100 works fine.
hitman Posted August 28, 2006 Posted August 28, 2006 Another thing...you have alot running in your background, and killing alot of them can possibly stabilize your system better. Heres a list you can probably start with: wdfrgr.exe tlntsvc.exe ctfmon.exe spools.exe unsecapp.exe tmntsrv.exe tmpfw.exe pcctlcom.exe conime.exe pccguide.exe tmproxy.exe tsc.exe dlm.exe soundman.exe Lots of resources there that needs to be killed, and I guess that some of them are from norton or some other a/v software. If you can kill some of them programs Ill be willing to bet your computer wont run so sluggish.
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