Reply 40 of 62, by Jo22
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wrote:Correct. Windows 95 needed 16MB of RAM to run properly, but nobody could afford 16MB of RAM...which is why I went back to WFWG311 until 1997 when memory prices came down. I remember in 1995 or so, in Canada 1MB of RAM cost $100. So if you wanted 16MB, you had to pay $1600. You could buy an entire computer for that much. At that time the Canadian dollar was only about 60 US cents, and we had 15% sales tax.
As far are CD-ROM drives not selling with CD-ROM drives in 1996, let's just say that anyone who bought one in that configuration would soon be investing in a 3rd party upgrade kit. CD-ROM drives were pretty bloody common after early 1994 (mainly due to affordability of the CDU-33A and CR-563B 2X drives)
I agree completely. I vaguely remember there also was a solid-state/memory crisis
somewhen in the late 80s or 90s. Prices went sky high for a short amount of time..
As far as Win95 is concerned, I remember that inoffically even 32MiB was required to make
the virtual memory manager work as intended. With less memory installed, it would constantly use the pagefile.
With just 4MiB a lot more than with 16MiB, of course. Unfortunately, I can't remember where I originally got that piece of information.
It has been so long since I worked with Win95.. Maybe it also was only relevant
for Win95 RTM an got "fixed" later on. I dunno. So let's better thread is as an urban myth, but keep it in our mind.
On my own machine(s), I pretty much went the 3.1-98SE-XP route. 😄
All in all, 16MiB is a safe amount of memory I think. It is the maximum RAM old versions of DOS
(or rather himem.sys) and 286/386SX machines or 486 machines w/ four 30-pin SIMM slots can handle.
Windows 98SE, who had got an improved virtual memory managment, also required 16MiB as a minimum.
Personally, I ran 98SE with 24MiB on a P75 for a long time and it worked okay - even for browsin' the web with IE 5.5.
Even though 64MiB would have been way better, I guess. ^^
Speaking of Windows 98SE, the worst I've ever encountered was a Compaq Deskpro 4/66 running 98SE.
I've never seen a slower machine before. Maybe it was just because of the hard drive.
Such a 486DX2-66 CPU is normally quite capable. Usually, a Compaq machine runs Win95 or WfW quite well.
wrote:I actually intended too try out 95 on a 386, but never got around to it. Btw, are there actually any 386 motherboards that will work with 16MB 30p SIMMs?
Wait, they do really exist ? I heard of them, but I thought they were some strange server stuff with parity, etc. 😳
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