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  2. Windows XP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_XP

    The maximum amount of RAM that Windows XP can support varies depending on the product edition and the processor architecture. All 32-bit editions of XP support up to 4 GB, except the Windows XP Starter edition, which supports up to 512 MB of RAM. [103] The 64-bit editions support up to 128 GB. [104]

  3. Comparison of Microsoft Windows versions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Microsoft...

    4 GB — Windows Server 2012 Standard/Datacenter — — 4 TB — — Windows Storage Server 2012 Standard — — 4 TB — — Windows Storage Server 2012 Workgroup — — 32 GB — — Hyper-V Server 2012 — — 4 TB — — Windows 8.1 (Core) 4 GB — 128 GB — — Windows 8.1 Pro/Enterprise: 4 GB — 512 GB — — Windows RT 8.1 ...

  4. Windows XP editions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_XP_editions

    A single standard process on a 32-bit Windows operating system is limited to a total of 2,093,056 kilobytes (2 GB minus one 4 KB page), while large address aware [45] 32-bit processes can allocate up to 4 GB. Windows XP x64 can support much more memory; although the theoretical memory limit a 64-bit computer can address is about 16 exabytes ...

  5. Acer Aspire One - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acer_Aspire_One

    Windows XP 120 GB 0.3 megapixel US, CA, GB, AE, TW, AU, INDIA: 160 GB ... Some more recent AOA's can be upgraded to 4 GB 1.5V RAM if they use DDR3 and the 64 bit CPU ...

  6. Classmate PC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classmate_PC

    Memory 1 GB / 512 MB DDR-II 256M (Linux only) or 512 MB SO-DIMM tech specs [44] 256 MB RAM [45] 1 GB DDR2 SDRAM system memory, running at 400 MHz Operating systems 1. Rxart (Argentina only) 2. Mandriva Linux Discovery 2007 3. Metasys Classmate 2.0 4. Ubuntu Education Edition for the ClassmatePC 5. Windows XP Professional [46] 1.

  7. Physical Address Extension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physical_Address_Extension

    The original releases of Windows XP and Windows XP SP1 used PAE mode to allow RAM to extend beyond the 4 GB address limit. However, it led to compatibility problems with 3rd party drivers which led Microsoft to remove this capability in Windows XP Service Pack 2.