Are you mixing different memory modules on the same machine? If that's
the case, extract one and try the computer with one module at a time,
just to discard RAM problems.
Regards and good luck,
Dani
El 01/07/2010 12:15, Claudiu Pruna escribiC3:
On Thu, 2010-07-01 at 10:32 +0300, Thanasis wrote:
I had such a problem with under-volted RAM. The RAM (DDR2) needed to be
manually set to 2.0 or 2.1 Volts (in BIOS).
on 06/30/2010 11:58 PM Claudiu Pruna wrote the following:
Hi there,
I have a question if I have one box running OpenBSD 4.7 and everytime I
do md5 on one file I get different results, who is more succeptible to
be broken ? cpu ? ram ? or mb. ?
Thanks for your thoughts.
the computer is an PIII/450MHz:
hw.machine=i386
hw.model=Intel Pentium III ("GenuineIntel" 686-class, 512KB L2 cache)
hw.ncpu=1
hw.byteorder=1234
hw.pagesize=4096
hw.disknames=wd0,cd0
hw.diskcount=2
hw.cpuspeed=448
hw.vendor=Compaq
hw.product=Deskpro EP/SB Series
hw.physmem=268005376
hw.usermem=267993088
could it still be a ram voltage problem ? as it has sdram ?