Originally recorded November 16, 2024.
OK, with a spare power supply, the machine powers and boots. Now, in the time that has passed, do I have any additional RAM that can be used in this system? I got a package from YouTuber @saturnevan but that didn't seem to want to work in this system.
Now I'm none too well versed on this new-fangled old stuff, but I was under the impression that for the system to run in dual-channel mode, it must have matched pairs of chips. It came with 2 2GB chips, I tried 2 more that I had but one was defective. I added the one working chip and the machine has 6GB of RAM now. That's 3 chips, an odd number, and certainly doesn't match, yet the machine still reports it's running in dual channel mode. OK, I guess I'll take it.
There was a LOT of putting RAM in, taking RAM out, putting RAM in, taking RAM out. That's generally the way it goes. Even though it's supposed to be 100% compatible, sometimes it just isn't. Sometimes we'd have to explain that to customers at Tiny Middle. It is, however, rather infuriating that upgrading RAM can be like that. You'd think after all this time using any variant of SDRAM chips (yes, that includes all flavors of DDR) that we'd get it all to work, but sometimes that's the way it goes.
As it stands now, the machine is configured identically, same processor, same amount of RAM as the video editing rig. Wow. I really waited too long. That old Pentium 4 was supposed to be a stop-gap measure, maybe it would last 2 years, maybe 3, but probably not much beyond that, but it beat all odds and continued on it's merry way.
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