On Thu, 03 Feb 2000, you wrote:
> Well, Jean-Louis,
> It happend that the box has a brand new ASUS board (BIOS 11/99)
> If I will set the BIOS for OS/2 I am getting only 14M. Go figure!!
> Again I think that thre is something wrong with the code itself - there
> are too many people complainig about the same thing - LINUX IS NOT ABLLE
> TO RECOGNIZE MORE THAN 64M
> It looks like the intruction code is made to recognize only a 16Bit
> integer.
>
Wrong. I've got 192 megs of ram here and I didn't do ANYTHING to
make it see all that RAM. One thing I recall reading is that
overclocking will cause Linux to see less than maximum RAM. If you're
overclocking, try setting it back to the "real" clock speed and see
what it reports.
Here's the output of my "free" command:
total used free shared buffers cached
Mem: 192848 181820 11028 55492 22740 79616
-/+ buffers/cache: 79464 113384
Swap: 102744 5708 97036
Keep in mind that I'm running two instances of RC5DES and an instance
of SETI@HOME on this machine at all times...
John