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Apple Computing Products:
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<blockquote data-quote="pigoo3" data-source="post: 1342925" data-attributes="member: 56379"><p>You don't have to be familiar with the term "Kernel Panic"...I just mentioned it for reference sake & for other folks reading/helping in this thread.</p><p></p><p>The important thing is that we accurately understand what's going on with your computer...so we can make suggestions.</p><p></p><p>If you upgraded your computer to 8gig of ram months ago...then the problem "most likely" isn't the ram...but that doesn't mean that we can eliminate the ram as a problem area. Any sort of hardware can go "bad" at any time...so even though some of your ram is "new"...it can still go bad.</p><p></p><p>The most straight forward way to eliminate the ram as a possibility is to remove all the ram...and only install 1-2 sticks of ram at a time...and use the process of elimination to see if any of the ram is bad. If all the ram is good...then we would have to try other ideas.</p><p></p><p>- Nick</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="pigoo3, post: 1342925, member: 56379"] You don't have to be familiar with the term "Kernel Panic"...I just mentioned it for reference sake & for other folks reading/helping in this thread. The important thing is that we accurately understand what's going on with your computer...so we can make suggestions. If you upgraded your computer to 8gig of ram months ago...then the problem "most likely" isn't the ram...but that doesn't mean that we can eliminate the ram as a problem area. Any sort of hardware can go "bad" at any time...so even though some of your ram is "new"...it can still go bad. The most straight forward way to eliminate the ram as a possibility is to remove all the ram...and only install 1-2 sticks of ram at a time...and use the process of elimination to see if any of the ram is bad. If all the ram is good...then we would have to try other ideas. - Nick [/QUOTE]
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Apple Computing Products:
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