var BLIP_SITE_URL = "http://blip.tv"; 
var OUTPUT_METHOD = "document_write";

if(typeof(Url) != 'function') {
	document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="http://blip.tv/scripts/url.js"><\/script>');
}

if(typeof(PokkariPlayer) != 'function') {
	document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="http://blip.tv/scripts/pokkariPlayer.js?ver=2009070701"><\/script>');
}

if(typeof(DetectFlashVer) != 'function') {
	document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="http://blip.tv/scripts/AC_OETags.js"><\/script>');
}




function play_blip_movie_243995() {
	try {
		if (typeof(PokkariPlayerOptions.showPlayerOptions) == "undefined") 
			PokkariPlayerOptions.showPlayerOptions = {};

		PokkariPlayerOptions.showPlayerOptions.playerUrl = "http://a.blip.tv/scripts/flash/showplayer.swf";

		var player = PokkariPlayer.GetInstanceByMimeType("video/x-flv");
		window.player_243995 = player;

		player.setPrimaryMediaUrl("http://blip.tv/file/get/L0ckergn0me-4GBRAMInWindows767.flv?source=3");
		player.setSiteUrl('http://blip.tv');
		player.setPermalinkUrl("http://blip.tv/file/view/239540?source=3&file_type=flv");
		player.setUsersId('31166');
		player.setUsersLogin('l0ckergn0me');
		player.setPostsId(243995);
		player.setGuid("E1B6ADC8-09B4-11DC-96A1-99A485ED323A");
		player.setPlayerTarget(document.getElementById('blip_movie_content_243995'));
		
		player.setAdvertisingType("overlay_freewheel,postroll_freewheel");
		
		
		player.setWidth(320);
		player.setHeight(240);
		
		
		
		player.setAutoPlay(true);
		
		
		player.setThumbnail("http://a.images.blip.tv/L0ckergn0me-4GBRAMInWindows767-739.jpg");
		
		player.setPostsTitle("4GB RAM in Windows");
		player.setDescription("<p><a href=\"http://live.pirillo.com/\">http://live.pirillo.com/</a> - Windows Vista 32 bit &#34;supports&#34; up to 4GB of memory, but is 4GB of memory enough to run Windows Vista? Sometimes it\'s more than enough.</p><p>If you\'re running a 32 bit system, 4GB is your technical upper limit. Of course, Windows may not report that you have all 4GB available! <a href=\"http://addressof.com/blog/archive/2007/05/12/Windows-Vista-_2200_supports_2200_-4GB-of-memory.--Sure-it-does_2E002E002E00_.aspx\">Addressof</a> has a good article on why this happens:</p><blockquote><p>Here is a little piece to the total 64-bit puzzle that no-one seems to be telling anyone about. In that 4GB of address space, your video card memory is partitioned. Meaning if you have a 256MB video card, 256MB is consumed in the 4GB of total addressable space that a 32-bit processor can utilize. Here\'s the problem; what if you have a video card that has 512MB, 640MB, 768MB? Yup, that will be mapped to the 4GB of addressable space. So if you had a 768MB NVidia 8800 card and 4GB of RAM, you\'d lose 768MB of that 4GB of memory immediately to the device making it non-accessible &#34;memory&#34; for the OS. And it doesn\'t stop there, all of your other devices that need to be communicated with (you know, anything with a driver) consumes part of this address space. So in my current 4GB worth of RAM system, 1.25GB worth of addressable space is consumed by devices.</p></blockquote><p>Under a 64 bit system you can use 4GB of memory and much more - up to 16 exbibytes! And if we know Windows, it will use all 16 exbibytes ;)</p><p>Is 4 GB of memory enough to run Windows Vista? Yes it is, according to Chris. What do you recommend?</p>");
		player.setTopics("windows,vista,memory,32,64,bit,bits,4gb,ram");
		player.setContentRating("TV-PG");
		
		
	player.render();
	} catch(e) {
		// no pp
        	
	}
}


