At 12:49 PM -0500 11/9/02, Laurent Daudelin wrote:
>You can go much higher than 192. 192 was based by Apple on what memory was
>available when the Wallstreet was introduced. You can go up to 1 GB, but I
>would suggest 512, so if you ever need to swap batteries when no power is
>available, the backup battery will be able to keep your Wallstreet sleeping,
>which wouldn't be the case with 1 GB of RAM.

I had a 128MB module in my WallStreet and started getting memory errors. To 
troubleshoot the problem, I took the 256MB single height SODIMM out of my tiBook, and 
put it in the top slot of the Wallstreet, it recognized only 128MB of it. The 
Wallstreet uses a double height SODIMM, which appears to be organized as two separate 
banks of memory. From my experiment, I concluded that the Wallstreet can only 
recognize 128MB per bank.

If that is not the case then, why did the Wallstreet only recognize 128MB of a 256MB 
single bank, single height SODIMM?

Paul

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