GoFuckYourself.com - Adult Webmaster Forum

GoFuckYourself.com - Adult Webmaster Forum (https://gfy.com/index.php)
-   Fucking Around & Business Discussion (https://gfy.com/forumdisplay.php?f=26)
-   -   RAM Memory (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=398017)

alex79 12-04-2004 01:12 AM

RAM Memory
 
there is any program to see if a RAM Memory is good or is broken?

steve90 12-04-2004 01:13 AM

first you dont need to put memory at the end of ram. but all you do is plug it in if the bios can see the ram then its good. no need for a test program

KRL 12-04-2004 01:15 AM

Everest is freeware and the best program anywhere to see every single thing about your PC.

http://www.lavalys.com/products/over...ng=en&pageid=1

:thumbsup

xenophobic 12-04-2004 01:15 AM

http://www.memtest.org/

steve90 12-04-2004 01:16 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by KRL
Everest is freeware and the best program anywhere to see every single thing about your PC.

http://www.lavalys.com/products/over...ng=en&pageid=1

:thumbsup

that is just for benchmarking

Femme Fa'tale 12-04-2004 01:16 AM

If your computer won't start and produce long beeps...you've got a broken memory....but if its not...check other parts...:)

xenophobic 12-04-2004 01:17 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by steve90
first you dont need to put memory at the end of ram. but all you do is plug it in if the bios can see the ram then its good. no need for a test program
unfortunately, you're incorrect in that assumption.

steve90 12-04-2004 01:20 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by xenophobic
unfortunately, you're incorrect in that assumption.
how so. If bios can not see the ram its no good or it is the wrong type

xenophobic 12-04-2004 01:22 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by steve90
how so. If bios can not see the ram its no good or it is the wrong type
because other factors have to be taken into account. like individual cells that lose charge that lead to corruption of the data inside the cell (e.g truncating memory addresses / returning garbage) the bios will still show the ram, the ram will still appear to work, but any data moved into the individual faulty cells will break.

KRL 12-04-2004 01:23 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by steve90
that is just for benchmarking
No its not.

It shows you everything even the temp of your CPU.

:1orglaugh :1orglaugh

steve90 12-04-2004 01:24 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by xenophobic
because other factors have to be taken into account. like individual cells that lose charge that lead to corruption of the data inside the cell (e.g truncating memory addresses / returning garbage) the bios will still show the ram, the ram will still appear to work, but any data moved into the individual faulty cells will break.
hmm never ran into that before nice to know

KRL 12-04-2004 01:24 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by steve90
that is just for benchmarking
Motherboard & CPU
Accurate low-level information about motherboard, CPU and BIOS, including chipset details, DMI enumeration, AGP configuration information, SPD memory modules list, DRAM timing information and CPU instruction set support.
Video adapter & monitor
Detailed information about the video adapter, video drivers and monitor, including DDC information, monitor serial number and supported video modes detection, low-level GPU details, OpenGL and Direct3D features list.
Storage devices
Information about all hard disk and optical disk drives, including IDE autodetection, S.M.A.R.T. disk health monitoring, ASPI SCSI devices list and partitions information.
Network adapters, multimedia, input devices
Exhaustive information about network adapters, sound cards, keyboard, mouse and game controllers, including NIC MAC address detection, IP and DNS list, network traffic monitoring, DirectSound, DirectMusic and DirectInput information.
Misc hardware
Information about PCI, PnP, PCMCIA and USB devices, communication ports, power management information, device resources list, printers information.

Software Information
Operating system
Detailed Windows information, including operating system installation date and product key, system services and system drivers list, process information, installed patches list, environment variables list, system folders list and system files content.
Server and display
Information about network shares, users and groups list, logged on users list, fonts list and Windows desktop configuration details.
Networking
Large amount of information about networking status, remote access and mailing accounts, network resources and Internet settings.
Installed software
Detailed information about installed programs, scheduled tasks, startup programs and anti-virus solutions.

Diagnostics
Hardware monitoring
Sensor information including system and CPU temperature, fan status, CPU, AGP and DRAM voltage monitoring, S.M.A.R.T. disk health status.
Benchmarking
Memory read and write speed measurement to stress the memory and cache subsystem, including references list to compare actual performance with other systems.
Tips & suggestions
Detection of possible hardware and software misconfiguration and compatibility issues.

Reporting
Report Wizard
Easy-to-use method to produce report files of the system, by either using pre-configured report profiles or custom selection of information.
Report formats
Three different report file formats: plain text, customizable HTML and the unique MHTML format. MHTML reports including icons are ideal for printing purposes.
Report e-mailing and printing
Built-in e-mail transfer client using SMTP, also support for MAPI and Outlook protocols. Instant report display and one-click printing capabilities using IE4+ technology.

xenophobic 12-04-2004 01:26 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by steve90
hmm never ran into that before nice to know
Just replaced a stick on a server that showed perfectly in the Bios, however applications would randomly crash with errors relating to memory addresses, I ran the above application on it (memtest) which showed about 4-7% of the time that the stick would either lose a memory address, or return garbage which was causing applications to crash.

alex79 12-04-2004 01:32 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by Femme Fa'tale
If your computer won't start and produce long beeps...you've got a broken memory....but if its not...check other parts...:)
it's start but after 1 min. it's restart again :(

Femme Fa'tale 12-04-2004 01:47 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by alex79
it's start but after 1 min. it's restart again :(
:uhoh...maybe its not the hardware...OS...I suppose...Do you have any partition? Is this occur for the first time?

steve90 12-04-2004 01:49 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by alex79
it's start but after 1 min. it's restart again :(
that sounds more like over heating but thats pretty fast for that to happen does your cpu fan still spin ?

Yngwie 12-04-2004 01:52 AM

or if your PC doesn't POST then you know at least one stick of ram is fucked.. I had one stick of my dual channel pc3200 ddr400 that was bad and the PC didn't even boot.

Yngwie 12-04-2004 01:53 AM

..........

Femme Fa'tale 12-04-2004 02:47 AM

...Do you have an anti-virus?...When was the last time you check and clean your hard disk for viruses and corrupt files?....It can be some viruses...hmmm...I know one that will enable your pc to restart itself...

alex79 12-05-2004 02:11 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by Femme Fa'tale
:uhoh...maybe its not the hardware...OS...I suppose...Do you have any partition? Is this occur for the first time?
is not the OS.. i have a clen install of win 98 after a hdd format, and imediately afer is entering in win98 (around after 1 min. after i start the pc) the computer restart.. if i start in DOS the computer is working without restarting..
also, i've tryed to install win2000 but after 30-40 of installing (befour the install ending) the computer is restarting and the install will resume..
also, is not the computer power supply (i've replaced the power supply and same thing.. the computer restart after 1 min. or so)

any others idees what can be the problem?

xenophobic 12-05-2004 02:14 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by alex79
is not the OS.. i have a clen install of win 98 after a hdd format, and imediately afer is entering in win98 (around after 1 min. after i start the pc) the computer restart.. if i start in DOS the computer is working without restarting..
also, i've tryed to install win2000 but after 30-40 of installing (befour the install ending) the computer is restarting and the install will resume..
also, is not the computer power supply (i've replaced the power supply and same thing.. the computer restart after 1 min. or so)

any others idees what can be the problem?

Alex did you ever download and boot the memtest CD? Have you also tried reseating the Graphic Card -- or even removing the graphic card? on some problem systems I normally empty the PCI bus totally, reseat RAM and CPU - then if still problems try replacing individual cards one at a time to rule out a bad card.

LeWeekend 12-05-2004 02:18 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by steve90
that sounds more like over heating but thats pretty fast for that to happen does your cpu fan still spin ?
yeah maybe over heating :)

alex79 12-05-2004 02:19 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by xenophobic
Alex did you ever download and boot the memtest CD? Have you also tried reseating the Graphic Card -- or even removing the graphic card? on some problem systems I normally empty the PCI bus totally, reseat RAM and CPU - then if still problems try replacing individual cards one at a time to rule out a bad card.
i've not tryed yet memtest.. i'm runing gold memory (another memory tester software right now)..
i can't replace individual cards becouse i don't have with what to replace :(

alex79 12-05-2004 02:20 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by steve90
that sounds more like over heating but thats pretty fast for that to happen does your cpu fan still spin ?
yeah.. the cpu fan still spin..

xenophobic 12-05-2004 02:24 AM

I would empty the PCI Bus of all cards but essential (Graphic Adapter if not onboard) - the reason I mention that is because you said that you are fine in DoS, which might point to a problem when a defective device is initilized in Windows (by it's device driver) If you do not have any more cards to replace the Graphic card I would take it in for testing at a computer repair store that offers a free diagnostic period (some do around here) and specifically ask them to test the card.

alex79 12-05-2004 02:27 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by xenophobic
I would empty the PCI Bus of all cards but essential (Graphic Adapter if not onboard) - the reason I mention that is because you said that you are fine in DoS, which might point to a problem when a defective device is initilized in Windows (by it's device driver) If you do not have any more cards to replace the Graphic card I would take it in for testing at a computer repair store that offers a free diagnostic period (some do around here) and specifically ask them to test the card.
i can replace the card :)
i have 2 computers.. the one with problems is an intel and have SDRAM memory..and the other without problems is a athlon and have DDRAM memroy .. i can't replace the memory but i will replace the video card right now and i will let u know if is the videocard :)

Femme Fa'tale 12-05-2004 07:32 PM

Hi Alex !:)

Try reading this...

http://www.computerhope.com/issues/ch000605.htm

I hope you can fix your PC soon...:winkwink:


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 12:32 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
©2000-, AI Media Network Inc123