îöèòø, ìà éëåìúé ìäúàô÷.
äöéèåè ùðúú ôä äåà ãó àùø îñáéø òì PAE ùìöåøê äòðééï åòì îðú ìôùè àú ääñáø, îùúîù áøòéåï ùì ùëáåú åäôðéåú òì îðú ìöîöí î÷åí, ëìåîø, ëîå áäôðéä ùâ'÷ äáéà, àí äîéãò äîìà (äôøåñ) äéä öøéê ìäùîø áæéëøåï åìà áùëáåú åäôðéåú, ìà ðéúï ìäëðéñ îáðéí ùì 32 áéè ìúåê æéëøåï îòì ùì 4GB.
ùéí ìá ìùåøä äøàùåðä îúåê äöéèåè ùìê:
In computing, Physical Address Extension (PAE), sometimes referred to as Page Address Extension,[1] is a memory management feature for the x86 architecture. PAE was first introduced by Intel in the Pentium Pro, and later by AMD in the Athlon processor.[2] It defines a page table hierarchy of three levels (instead of two), with table entries of 64 bits each instead of 32, allowing these CPUs to directly access a physical address space larger than 4 gigabytes (232 bytes).
ëìåîø àúä îáéï ùæä ñåâ ùì ùéîåù áîáðä ùìà îåúàí ìçìåèéï ìöåøä ùáä òåáãú áîòøëú äôòìä (32 áéè) ëé äîòøëú äôòìä òãééï îééöøú îáðéí ùì 32 àìà ø÷ ôìñèø ìðéäåì æéëøåï...



öéèåè ääåãòä áúâåáä