Return-Path: Received: from [192.168.1.22]) by mail. (Weasel v1.20) for ; 23 Mar 2001 01:00:40 From: "Digest" To: "OS/2GenAu Digest" Date: Wed, 23 Mar 2001 01:00:40 +1100 (EDT) Reply-To: "OS2GenAu" Priority: Normal X-Mailer: CASMailer 1.0 for OS/2 Warp PPC 5.05 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Subject: OS/2 GenAu Digest No.8 Message-ID: <200103230000.000029G6atmail.> Date:- 23 March 2001 1) Ian Manners Re: [os2genau] >64M RAM 2) Leigh Bunting Re: [os2genau] >64M RAM 3) Gavin Miller [os2genau] Laptop Dual Display 4) Ed Durrant Re: [os2genau] >64M RAM 5) Ed Durrant Re: [os2genau] Laptop Dual Display 6) Robert Traynor (BobT) Re: [os2genau] >64M RAM 1==================================== Hi Leigh >I understand that for OS/2 to see more than 64M, I have to apply the >kernel patch. As this came out at fp14 level, does that mean I have to >apply this fp, or later, to get it to work? What might happen if I apply >the kernel patch to fp10 level? Dont apply the kernal refresh !! Use Daniela's ldr patch patchldr.zip It's on hobbes, leo, and here. http://www.os2site dot com/sw/upgrades/patches/ Cheers Ian 2==================================== Ian Manners wrote: > Use Daniela's ldr patch patchldr.zip Thanks Ian, that was a great solution. No great dramas applying it. We would all be sunk without Daniela. She needs a medal of some sort. -- Leigh Bunting Colonel Light Gardens South Australia Find out more about Col. Light Gdns. here - http://www.cobweb dot com dot au/~pknight/clghs/ 3==================================== G'day all, Recently I held a small P.D. session for some of the guys at work to do with system resources and the like. I liberated the laptop which I installed OS/2 on and proceeded to prepare for the presentation. After plugging in all the connections to the external projector and booted up, I found that the LCD display would not operate, only the CRT out. They both worked through Windoze. In fact none of the Laptop's "Fn" keys were accessable. Is this some kind of "Designed for Microsoft Windows" type of hardware thing? Here's what I used: A REALLY old Texas Instruments 510CDT Warp 4 fix 9 Chips 'n Tech 65550 disp driver (version ????) Incidentally, I used Star Office 5.1a for the presentation and was a complete success, despite no LCD. :-) 4==================================== Warp 4 has always been able to see more than 64MB of memory. I think the Kernal upgrade you refer to is the inclusion of the Aurora (WSeB) kernal into the client, to allow direct addressing of over 256MB of virtual address space (this limitation stopped several Windows programs from working under Odin but apart from that didn't cause "normal" users any real problems). There is often a setting in your CMOS for OS2 > 64MB - this goes back to the days of OS/2 1.x and I tend to leave it in its default (off) position. The machine I am using now has 128MB of memory and this option off. Regards, Ed Durrant. Leigh Bunting wrote: > > Hi All, > > I understand that for OS/2 to see more than 64M, I have to apply the > kernel patch. As this came out at fp14 level, does that mean I have to > apply this fp, or later, to get it to work? 5==================================== When you say LCD, do you infact mean a LCD panel that goes onto an overhead projector ? The issue where only the inbuilt laptop's LCD display OR the external Monitor/LCD Panel/Projector will work, is usually a hardware issue rather than a software one. If the feed to the external device is too much for the video chip, this will often occur. Several of the better (and hence more expensive) projectors have an extra buffer amplifier on their video input to avoid this problem. There are also "after market" external amplifier/splitter units that you can buy to do the same thing. Although why they should work under Windoze and not OS/2 evades me unless it is a video driver issue. Normally what a Fn key does is also defined by the PC manufacturer. A Fn key is not a windows keyboard type key. Hope I understood your problem correctly and thrown some light on why it may be happenning. Regards, Ed Durrant. Gavin Miller wrote: > > G'day all, After plugging in > all the connections to the external projector and booted up, I found that the LCD display would not operate, > only the CRT out. 6==================================== On Thu, 22 Mar 2001 21:24:01 -0500, Ed Durrant wrote: >Warp 4 has always been able to see more than 64MB of memory. Not quite right. SOME bios'es in SOME machines, usually produced from about 2 years ago, were unable to allow os/2 to see more than the first 64mb of ram. This was because these either did not offer a choice of the bios memory setting Ed is refering to, or were false in this regard. That is why Daniella produced her patch file as Ian Manners said, quote:- "patchldr.zip". It's on hobbes, leo, and here. http://www.os2site dot com/sw/upgrades/patches/ end quote. All newer motherboards available today should have the correct setting in the bios and it SHOULD function correctly. >I think the Kernal upgrade you refer to is the inclusion of the >Aurora (WSeB) kernal into the client, to allow direct addressing of >over 256MB of virtual address space (this limitation stopped several >Windows programs from working under Odin but apart from that didn't >cause "normal" users any real problems). The kernal upgrades are for Fixpak #15 and WSeB and eCS and MCP (more accurately now known as CCP = IBM Client Convenience Pack) and ONLY these systems. No one should use these kernal upgrades unless you are at these levels. The kernal upgrades were originally meant to fix problems with fixpak #15 level code (ie eCS, MCP or CCP, Fixpak #15 itself). One of the more serious problems was inability to boot on non pentium systems. ie 486 cpu's etc. Recently, they introduced the fix for the os2 loader "os2ldr" which is to be installed _ONLY_ IF you need it on YOUR system. I don't now why they included the os2ldr fix in with the kernal fixes, but perhaps it was the simplest means of distribution. This "feature" is fully documented in the kernal upgrade files. I have installed the kernal fixes on my Pentium 3 800mhz and they work real good. :) If anyone following this discussion, wants to check their system to see if their memory is being fully utilised, Daniella also provides in her patchldr.zip file a DOS execute-able that will do a memory test for you. You MUST run it in a DOS box, OR with a batch file with a pause statement as the last line. >There is often a setting in your CMOS for OS2 > 64MB - this goes back >to the days of OS/2 1.x and I tend to leave it in its default (off) >position. The machine I am using now has 128MB of memory and this option >off. > >Regards, > >Ed Durrant. > >Leigh Bunting wrote: >> >> Hi All, >> >> I understand that for OS/2 to see more than 64M, I have to apply the >> kernel patch. As this came out at fp14 level, does that mean I have to >> apply this fp, or later, to get it to work? Robert Traynor (BobT) ,-._|\ Robert Traynor (BobT) / Oz \ email rtraynoratnetstra dot com dot au \_,--.x/ End==================================== List Admin Note: The format of the digest will be changing in the next few weeks or so, to allow easier reading, the codings just a bit more difficult but thank you for bearing with me. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- To Subscribe/Unsubscribe please go to http://www.os2site.com/list/ ================================================