posted on Mon Jan 07, 2013 10:22 am
I don't think you can answer #1 fully without knowing more about the processor. Doesn't the memory controller dictate whether or not it can read those super-high densities? Or is it part of the BIOS? For instance, my work machine is a Sandy Bridge based Dell Latitude. Officially it supports 8GB of RAM, but there are lots of examples online of people putting 8GB SO-DIMMs in it for a total of 16GB.
So just because the kid's homework says the system "supports" 16GB doesn't mean that it only sees only 16GB no matter what. It could very well not boot, on the other extreme, if the memory density is too high. That was true of some G4-equipped Macs (so the memory controller was part of the chipset, not the CPU) that could not handle PC-100 DIMMs larger than 256MB, and those had to be double-sided DIMMs because the higher density chips weren't compatible. Sawtooth and Gigabit Ethernet G4 towers, IIRC.
I do not understand what I do. For what I want to do, I do not do. But what I hate, I do.