Its probably talking about your RAM
2007-02-25 13:03:36
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answer #1
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answered by Fremen 6
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Late model motherboards manufactured in the past few years have 48-bit LBA support for large hard drives. The ATA Interface Limit (128 GiB / 137 GB) Barrier can be broken with a motherboard that has 48-bit LBA support. Also, Windows XP SP1 is the minimum operating system to support large hard drives. The original XP doesn't support 48-bit LBA.
2007-02-26 00:35:42
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Did you have 198 gig free before you installed the movie editing software? Some older computers and operating systems don't recognize large hard drives.
2007-02-25 21:04:28
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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does that agree with what your operating system says about the hard drive?
in windows
click "start" >> click "my computer" >> right click on "x:" where x is the drive in question >> click "properties"
technically, a 200 GB (200 billion byte) is only 186 GB (as memory is counted: 1 GB = 1024^3 bytes). subtract a little for overhead.
2007-02-25 21:11:19
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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I've had a computer for only a couple of year's.I do everything you can do on a computer,movie's,picture's,edit,picture's,dvd copying,what ever,and as long as iv'e been useing my computer i've never worried about gb'b or mb's or what ever.Why do people worry about that.If the computer run's like you want it to,why worry about **** you can't see. When your computer stop's then worry about storeage space and drive ram's.Get on with what your doing and leave the little stuff alone till you need it.
2007-02-25 21:54:17
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answer #5
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answered by Larry-Oklahoma 7
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