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When your conventional memory runs up, you can't put more into expanded memory.
However, all the running programs had to fit into conventional memory area, as there was no support for paging to disk.
Conventional memory layout usually places one bit of many different correction words adjacent on a chip.
DoubleSpace also consumed a significant amount of conventional memory, making it difficult to run memory-intensive programs.
This is useful for old DOS programs which only use conventional memory.
Force diskcopy to use only the conventional memory for temporary storage:
Loadhigh and other methods of freeing conventional memory have largely become obsolete.
What uses up the conventional memory?
What does, what what only goes into conventional memory not into expanded?
This allowed it, on a 386 system, to provide significantly more free conventional memory than any other DOS.
Conventional memory is the first 640 kilobytes, and the processor can get to it directly, in what is called "real mode."
Symphony was designed to work completely in the standard 640k of conventional memory, supplemented by any expanded memory.
This automatic optimization often still did not provide the same result as doing it by hand, in the sense of providing the greatest free conventional memory.
Designs that use conventional memory addresses as data dependency tags are called static dataflow machines.
"I've had similar problems with other CD's - require obscure drivers, or too much conventional memory, etc.
The Rambus memory system is extravagantly expensive, more than twice the cost of conventional memory chips.
After version 0.63, QB64 was able to compile itself so the Conventional memory limitations no longer applied.
Most programs, including DOS itself, are confined to the first 640 kilobytes of it, called conventional memory.
DOS 5.0 loads itself above the 640-kilobyte ceiling, freeing space, but the conventional memory available was getting dangerously down into the 500-kilobyte range.
Er, you get two rows saying conventional memory and expanded memory, and two numbers.
Is your conventional memory?
The answer is that the expanded memory driver that you have installed uses 12KBytes of conventional memory.
Even if you've got lots of expanded memory left unused, you can't use it once your conventional memory fills up, that's it.
DOS itself could utilize the area for some of its storage needs, thereby freeing up more conventional memory for programs.
The first memory segment (64 KB) of the conventional memory area is named low memory.