Correct me if I'm wrong, but I've always been under the impression that under Win32 protected memory essentially means that each running process is given a pseudo-imaginary 4GB flatly-addressed ...
It seems to me that while Win2k is very good at making sure apps don't overwrite each other's memory space or that of the OS, there's no way to prevent them from having internal memory leaks. In the ...
A technique that prohibits one program in memory from accidentally clobbering another active program in memory. Using various methods, a protective boundary is created around the program, and ...
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