Running long memory intensive programs!

Rajiv Agrawal ragrawal at magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu
Mon Jun 17 15:32:03 AEST 1991


In article <1991Jun16.045246.12825 at agate.berkeley.edu> ndeng at dec-1.CE.Berkeley.EDU (Nan Deng) writes:
>In article <23 at interet.UUCP> iris at interet.UUCP (User) writes:
>>In article <1991Jun13.160602.23726 at afit.af.mil> dlindsle at afit.af.mil (David T. Lindsley) writes:
>>>The only Fortran I know of that can use extended memory is Watcom's.
>>Several others do.  We use Silicon Valley Software's FORTRAN and C and
>>are fairly pleased with their performance and quality.  Others include
>>NDP, and Lahey.  All of these use PharLap's extender.  
>		  ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>Not necessarily. Lahey uses the OS/386 DOS extender instead of Phar Lap.
                                 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Is this the same as the made by Ergo Software out in Boston?  We have been 
using a product by them called OS/386 for quite some time with Microsoft
FORTRAN 5.0.  Works quite well.  I think the street cost is about $595 and
they charge about $10 for a binder (provided you sign some form).

>
>Only Lahey comes with the binder in the compiler/dos extender package.
>Although it is the most expensive in all compilers, it does have an
>unlimited runtime license. The others, like SVS and NDP using Phar Lap 
>extender, will need to perchase a 1000 copy runtime license directly from 
>Phar Lap in order to get the binder which costs $2,000, and you must fill 
>out quarterly reports to the company to report how many copy you have used 
>in the license. 
>

Has anybody tried out the latest FORTRAN from Microsoft ie. V 5.1?  It has 
some library to run program under Windows that can suck up all the 
extended memory.  

Rajiv.



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