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Here is my wife's response to the story, who happens to be Intel's Americas Marketing Manager for this entire product line:Kris: Is this correct?Kris' Wife: "no - not anymore."
"if you really want the details of the memory addressing…read this document (page 55; section 4.4): ftp://download.intel.com/design/mobile/datashts/31627303.pdf
Bottom line is that the new 965 chipset (that is part of our new platform introduced in May, code named "Santa Rosa") supports 36-bit memory addressing which allows the overlapping portions to be remapped. So there is no artificial limitation to 3GB on the Intel 965 chipset.
The key is you want a platform with the 965 vs. the 945 chipset. Another way to tell is if the Core 2 Duo processor number has a 7 in the first digit (i.e. T7700 for the standard voltage 2.4GHz processor).
You'll note that you can configure the new MacBook Pros on the Apple site with either 2GB or 4 GB. And a quote from that very same section of the configurator says "All MacBook Pro models support up to 4 gigabytes of RAM." "
----- Original Message -----In a message dated 8/31/2007 11:27:27 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, uncledig@gmail.com writes:http://blogs.zdnet.com/Apple/?p=321
http://apcmag.com/3814/4gb_notebook_ram_but_not_for_macbooks
http://news.softpedia.com/news/MacBook-Pro-Core-2-Duo-Limitations-39006.shtmlThanks very much! Did you say you had 4gig on your Toshiba?
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