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  2. Intel Inboard 386 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_Inboard_386

    The Inboard 386/PC were expandable up to 5 MB with the combination of onboard memory and with optional piggyback memory board. [5] Both boards utilized DOS drivers to configure the onboard memory. Without these drivers, the boards would still function, but the onboard memory could only be used as conventional, and not as extended or expanded.

  3. Helix Netroom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helix_Netroom

    Introduced in August 1990, NETROOM was originally titled "LAN Memory Manager." Version 1.0 of NETROOM was a re-packaged version of Helix's HeadRoom with the HeadRoom Network Extensions, bundled together and targeted to network users. NETROOM loaded network drivers into a virtual machine created using an expanded memory page frame.

  4. QEMM - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QEMM

    Quarterdeck Expanded Memory Manager (QEMM) is a memory manager produced by Quarterdeck Office Systems in the late 1980s through the late 1990s. It was the most popular third-party memory manager for the MS-DOS and other DOS operating systems .

  5. CEMM - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CEMM

    CEMM, for Compaq Expanded Memory Manager was the first so-called PC "memory manager" for Intel 80386 CPUs, able to provide expanded memory (EMS) emulation by using the virtual memory features and the virtual 8086 mode of the CPU. It was present in Compaq DOS 3.10, shipping with the Compaq Deskpro 386 in September 1986. [1] [2]

  6. EMM386 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EMM386

    EMM386.EXE can map memory into unused blocks in the upper memory area (UMA), allowing device drivers and terminate-and-stay-resident programs to be "loaded high", preserving conventional memory. The technique probably first appeared with the development of CEMM , included with Compaq's OEM MS-DOS for the Compaq Deskpro 386 in 1986.

  7. 386MAX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/386MAX

    386 MAX (originally 386 to the Max, later Qualitas MAX) is a computer memory manager for DOS-based personal computers. [1] It competed with Quarterdeck's QEMM memory manager. It was manufactured by Qualitas. BlueMax was a special version designed for the IBM PS/2 with ROM compression to get the most of the Upper Memory Blocks.

  8. HIMEM.SYS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HIMEM.SYS

    In DR DOS 5.0 (1990) and 6.0 (1991), the driver is named HIDOS.SYS rather than HIMEM.SYS, like the corresponding DCONFIG.SYS or CONFIG.SYS directive HIDOS=ON. In FreeDOS , the matching file is named HIMEMX.SYS and can be loaded from the FreeDOS configuration file named FDCONFIG.SYS or CONFIG.SYS .

  9. List of RAM drive software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_RAM_drive_software

    Can use Physical Address Extension to create a virtual disk in memory normally inaccessible to 32-bit versions of Microsoft Windows (both memory above the 4 GB point, and memory in the PCI hole). [13] There is also an open source plugin that replaces the RAM drive on Bart's PE Builder with one based on Gavotte's rramdisk.sys. [14]

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