From: Steven Vishoot sir_funzone@yahoo.com
As Carol Brady said "what was all that about" I dont know if anyone else feels this way, but i think this subjuct has been beaten to death and beyond. Not sure if i remember right, but wasnt the original post about upgrading from 4.0 to 4.1? How did this topic become an engineering course? sorry for being a crab...but come on....
If you deploy servers with more than 1GB of RAM, and definitely more than 4GB of RAM, you should be aware of what limitations there are with Intel solutions.
That's what this was about.
If someone else wanted to make it into a discussion of board traces and other, irrelevant non-sense, then I'm sorry for getting into that with him.
-- Bryan J. Smith mailto:b.j.smith@ieee.org
Bryan J. Smith b.j.smith@ieee.org -}Sent: Tuesday, June 28, 2005 10:29 AM -}If you deploy servers with more than 1GB of RAM, and -}definitely more than 4GB of RAM, you should be aware -}of what limitations there are with Intel solutions. -} -}That's what this was about. -}Bryan J. Smith mailto:b.j.smith@ieee.org
interesting, maybe i missed something then as i have been following most of the thread(s) yet...
what _practical_ knowledge are we or were we supposed to have gained in terms of CentOS, security, and or anything else please?
or should i be more specific with the question(s)?
the reason i ask is that i just dumped 2 gig dram in a basic P4 Intel 3.0GHz box to play with.
regards and TIA,
- rh
Robert Hanson wrote:
Bryan J. Smith b.j.smith@ieee.org -}Sent: Tuesday, June 28, 2005 10:29 AM -}If you deploy servers with more than 1GB of RAM, and -}definitely more than 4GB of RAM, you should be aware -}of what limitations there are with Intel solutions. -} -}That's what this was about. -}Bryan J. Smith mailto:b.j.smith@ieee.org
interesting, maybe i missed something then as i have been following most of the thread(s) yet...
what _practical_ knowledge are we or were we supposed to have gained in terms of CentOS, security, and or anything else please?
Whether it is possible to get direct addressing above 1G, 4G and on what hardware.