Badhon_raj
New Member
Windows 7 (32-bit) Patch to Support 4 GB Ram or more! | 3.68MB -=FS=-
In the Internet often haunts thestatement a 32-bit operating system can technically only managed a maximum of 4 GB of RAM. This is wrong and Microsoftis even evidence itself.
Yes, this is all wrong Guys!! Now technology are advancing, and here come PAE from the year 1995!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! duhhhhh!!!
There is no need to use pure 64bit os to take advantage of more rams, windows 7 32 bit canoptimize more than 4GB ram using PAE technology , PAE are somewhat the same like our 32bit processor that support 64bit code (by extention). Your motherbord/bios need to support PAE and remaping memory address. The other thing you need are the kernel patch to remove 3.xgb ram limit by microsoft, those who are like me that have 4GB ram but windows 7 32bit only see 3.2GB ram usable, can use the patch to fully utilized full 4GB ram, just make sure your motherboard bios detect the correct full 4GB or 8GB of your system ram.
When the program open, it just have one button, just click it and after a while it will prompt some black screen to remove the watermark, just press y andit will reboot your windows 7. After that you will have 2 windows boot option and you also can select the old win 7 kernel (just in case), just select the '>128 GB memory' and load your windows 7, check the information page for the ram used. To edit the boot option i recommend program name EasyBCD, you can edit some option of the windows boot manager like default option and timer (10 second min).
After this some of you might stillhave a watermark of windows test mode in the right bottom desktop, means mcbuider need to be run again, open cmd in runbox then type mcbuilder.exe andenter, this might take a while, after that reboot your system and the watermark will be gone.
I tested it out my self with windows 7 ultimate, and its work, I got full 4GB and even tryadd another 1 stick of 2gb more, so total would be 6gb of rams in windows 7 32bit.
My windows 7 32-bit with 6GB of RAM.
http://www.google.com/search?q=4GB-7600.RTM.x86.04.08.2009.exe&sourceid=ie7&rls=com.microsoft:de:IE-Address&ie=&oe=
In the Internet often haunts thestatement a 32-bit operating system can technically only managed a maximum of 4 GB of RAM. This is wrong and Microsoftis even evidence itself.
Yes, this is all wrong Guys!! Now technology are advancing, and here come PAE from the year 1995!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! duhhhhh!!!
There is no need to use pure 64bit os to take advantage of more rams, windows 7 32 bit canoptimize more than 4GB ram using PAE technology , PAE are somewhat the same like our 32bit processor that support 64bit code (by extention). Your motherbord/bios need to support PAE and remaping memory address. The other thing you need are the kernel patch to remove 3.xgb ram limit by microsoft, those who are like me that have 4GB ram but windows 7 32bit only see 3.2GB ram usable, can use the patch to fully utilized full 4GB ram, just make sure your motherboard bios detect the correct full 4GB or 8GB of your system ram.
When the program open, it just have one button, just click it and after a while it will prompt some black screen to remove the watermark, just press y andit will reboot your windows 7. After that you will have 2 windows boot option and you also can select the old win 7 kernel (just in case), just select the '>128 GB memory' and load your windows 7, check the information page for the ram used. To edit the boot option i recommend program name EasyBCD, you can edit some option of the windows boot manager like default option and timer (10 second min).
After this some of you might stillhave a watermark of windows test mode in the right bottom desktop, means mcbuider need to be run again, open cmd in runbox then type mcbuilder.exe andenter, this might take a while, after that reboot your system and the watermark will be gone.
I tested it out my self with windows 7 ultimate, and its work, I got full 4GB and even tryadd another 1 stick of 2gb more, so total would be 6gb of rams in windows 7 32bit.
My windows 7 32-bit with 6GB of RAM.
http://www.google.com/search?q=4GB-7600.RTM.x86.04.08.2009.exe&sourceid=ie7&rls=com.microsoft:de:IE-Address&ie=&oe=
But before you start with the solutions, you should know that if you have a 32 bit Windows 10 operating system installed. Solution 4: Update BIOS. In some cases, an outdated BIOS version has been known to cause this memory bug to appear in Windows 10. SOLVED: Windows 10 Won’t Use Full RAM. Download Bluestacks Offline Installer for Windows 10 64 Bit/32 Bit or Windows 10/7/8 PC/Laptop. Some users use this bluestacks application offline and some users wants this online. Coming to Windows 10 users survey there are equal number of 32 bit Windows 10 & 64 bit windows 10 users those who want’s to use in offline and online.
can any one please comment on this? Does it work? Is it safe to use? I found it on the internet and I don't know whethe it works or not. Do any of you have any idea on it? Please help.Win 10 Ram Patch
32 Bit Ram Patch Download
Thanks in advance...32 Bit Ram Patch Download Windows 10 Download
Specs:
ASRock M3A770DE AM3 AMD 770 ATX AMD Motherboard
AMD Athlon II X3 445 Processor
Radeon HD 5670 512MB graphics card
4GB RAM (for some reason it says 3.12GB usable)
32-bit Windows 10
My motherboard says it can support 16GB of RAM, but apparently Windows 8 and before can only handle 4GB on 32-bit. Is this the same for Windows 10? In my task manager I'm typically using around 25% of my CPU and 80-95% of my RAM and my computer runs extremely slow when a lot of stuff is opened. So if I'm correct, upgrading the RAM is pretty much a necessity over all other upgrades.
Side question: sometimes my computer locks up where everything literally freezes and my sound goes 'bzzzzzzz' if something is playing when it freezes. If I leave it like that it'll eventually just abruptly stop the computer completely. I always thought that the culprit was my CPU overheating, but perhaps it's my lack of adequate RAM?
So my question is, do I need to move to 64-bit before I upgrade my RAM? And if so, will there be a way to do it without having to do a factory reset on my hard drive and move all of my data over?
Thanks
ASRock M3A770DE AM3 AMD 770 ATX AMD Motherboard
AMD Athlon II X3 445 Processor
Radeon HD 5670 512MB graphics card
4GB RAM (for some reason it says 3.12GB usable)
32-bit Windows 10
My motherboard says it can support 16GB of RAM, but apparently Windows 8 and before can only handle 4GB on 32-bit. Is this the same for Windows 10? In my task manager I'm typically using around 25% of my CPU and 80-95% of my RAM and my computer runs extremely slow when a lot of stuff is opened. So if I'm correct, upgrading the RAM is pretty much a necessity over all other upgrades.
Side question: sometimes my computer locks up where everything literally freezes and my sound goes 'bzzzzzzz' if something is playing when it freezes. If I leave it like that it'll eventually just abruptly stop the computer completely. I always thought that the culprit was my CPU overheating, but perhaps it's my lack of adequate RAM?
So my question is, do I need to move to 64-bit before I upgrade my RAM? And if so, will there be a way to do it without having to do a factory reset on my hard drive and move all of my data over?
Thanks