LIM EMS - meaning and definition. What is LIM EMS
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What (who) is LIM EMS - definition

SYSTEM OF BANK SWITCHING IN DOS MEMORY MANAGEMENT
Expanded Memory Specification; Expanded Memory System; Expanded Memory; LIM EMS; EMS memory manager; EMS emulator; EEMS; Expanded storage; Expanded memory manager; Expanded Memory Manager; Lotus-Intel-Microsoft; EMMXXXX0; Enhanced Expanded Memory Specification; Enhanced EMS; EMS (memory management); EMS 3.0; EMS 3.2; EMS 4.0; Expanded Memory Specification 3.0; Expanded Memory Specification 3.2; Expanded Memory Specification 4.0; EEMS 3.2; EEMS 3.1; Enhanced Expanded Memory Specification 3.1; Enhanced Expanded Memory Specification 3.2; AQA 3.1; AST Quadram Ashton-Tate; AST/Quadram/Ashton-Tate; AST-Quadram-Ashton-Tate; LIM 3.0; LIM 3.2; LIM 4.0; LIM Expanded Memory Specification; AQA Enhanced Expanded Memory Specification; AQA Enhanced EMS; LIM EMS 3.0; LIM EMS 3.2; LIM EMS 4.0; LIMulator; EMS memory; Expanded Memory Adapter; EMMQXXX0; EMMXXXQ0; EMM$$$$$; EMS memory tiling; AST RAMpage; AST Research RAMpage; RAMpage; RAMpage!; AST Research RAMpage!; AST RAMpage!; AST RAMpage Plus; AST Research RAMpage Plus; RAMpage Plus; Quadram Quadems+; Quadems+; Limulator; AQA EEMS; IBM XMA; IBM Expanded Memory Adapter; XMA (expanded memory); Emsimulator; Kam & Associates Emsimulator; V-EMM; Fort V-EMM; Fort's V-EMM; Fort's Software V-EMM; Limsim; Larson Limsim; Larson Computing Limsim; Above Disk; Above Disc; Tele-Ware West Above Disk; Tele-Ware West Above Disc; Tele-Ware Above Disk; Tele-Ware Above Disc; Teleware Above Disk; Teleware Above Disc; EMS specification; LIM EMS specification; Lotus/Intel/Microsoft Expanded Memory Specification Version 4.0; Lotus/Intel Expanded Memory Specification Version 3.0; Lotus/Intel/Microsoft Expanded Memory Specification Version 3.2; Lotus/Intel/Microsoft Expanded Memory Specification; EMS Memory Manager; EMM (memory management)
  • pages]] are bank-switched in the [[page frame]], part of the [[upper memory area]].
  • A section of the lower 1 MiB address space provides a "window" into several megabytes of Expanded Memory

LIM EMS         
Ems Dispatch         
  • Memorial stone to the Ems Dispatch in [[Bad Ems]]
  • Wilhelm I of Prussia in Ems
PRUSSIAN TELEGRAM AND PRESS RELEASE THAT INCITED THE FRENCH EMPIRE TO START THE FRANCO-PRUSSIAN WAR
Ems telegram; Ems dispatch; Emser Depesche; Ems Telegram; Ems Despatch
The Ems Dispatch (, ), sometimes called the Ems Telegram, was published on 13 July 1870 and incited the Second French Empire to start the Franco-Prussian War and to declare war on the Kingdom of Prussia on 19 July 1870. The actual dispatch was an internal message from Prussian King Wilhelm I's vacationing site to Otto von Bismarck in Berlin, reporting demands made by the French ambassador.
Expanded memory         
In DOS memory management, expanded memory is a system of bank switching that provided additional memory to DOS programs beyond the limit of conventional memory (640 KiB).

Wikipedia

Expanded memory

In DOS memory management, expanded memory is a system of bank switching that provided additional memory to DOS programs beyond the limit of conventional memory (640 KiB).

Expanded memory is an umbrella term for several incompatible technology variants. The most widely used variant was the Expanded Memory Specification (EMS), which was developed jointly by Lotus Software, Intel, and Microsoft, so that this specification was sometimes referred to as "LIM EMS". LIM EMS had several versions. The first widely implemented version was EMS 3.2, which supported up to 8 MiB of expanded memory and uses parts of the address space normally dedicated to communication with peripherals (upper memory) to map portions of the expanded memory. EEMS, an expanded-memory management standard competing with LIM EMS 3.x, was developed by AST Research, Quadram and Ashton-Tate ("AQA"); it could map any area of the lower 1 MiB. EEMS ultimately was incorporated in LIM EMS 4.0, which supported up to 32 MiB of expanded memory and provided some support for DOS multitasking as well. IBM, however, created its own expanded-memory standard called XMA.

The use of expanded memory became common with games and business programs such as Lotus 1-2-3 in the late 1980s through the mid-1990s, but its use declined as users switched from DOS to protected-mode operating systems such as Linux, IBM OS/2, and Microsoft Windows.