PCMCIA Device Requiring an Upper Memory Area May Not WorkID: Q129327
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The PCMCIA card device in your laptop computer may not initialize properly.
Some PCMCIA devices require an upper memory area mapped to the PCMCIA
socket for data buffering. If this memory region is in use by the
computer's BIOS or a built-in device, the PCMCIA device does not respond
when the Windows protected-mode socket driver tries to allocate the
memory.
For example, if the computer's BIOS allocates memory for ROM shadowing in
the upper memory area (UMA) and the socket driver tries to reallocate this
memory, the PCMCIA device fails to initialize. A sample failure code for a
PCMCIA network card experiencing this problem is "Problem 10."
To work around this problem, reserve the region of memory that is already
in use. To do so, follow these steps:
Keywords : kbenv kbhw win95 win98
Version : WINDOWS:95,98
Platform : WINDOWS
Issue type : kbprb
Last Reviewed: January 15, 1999