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Dell Inspiron 3700 Reference Manual page 51

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IRQ2
Reserved; generated internally by the interrupt controller to enable IRQ8 through IRQ15
IRQ3
Available for use by a PC Card unless the integrated serial port or infrared port is configured for COM2 or COM4
IRQ4
Available for use by a PC Card unless the integrated serial port or infrared port is configured for COM1 (the default) or COM3
IRQ5
Available for use by the audio controller
IRQ6
Generated by the diskette drive controller to indicate that the diskette drive requires the attention of the microprocessor
IRQ7
Available for use by a PC Card or audio controller if the parallel port is disabled
IRQ8
Reserved; generated by the system I/O controller's real-time clock (RTC)
IRQ9
Reserved; generated by the video controller
IRQ10
Available for use by a PC Card or audio controller unless the Inspiron 3700 Advanced Port Replicator (APR) is attached
IRQ11
Generated by Universal Serial Bus (USB), PC Card, and audio controllers; available for use by a PC Card
IRQ12
Reserved; generated by the keyboard controller to indicate that the output buffer of the DualPoint™ integrated pointing device or the 
external PS/2 mouse is full
IRQ13
Reserved; generated by the math coprocessor
IRQ14
Reserved; generated by the hard-disk drive to indicate that the drive requires the attention of the microprocessor
IRQ15
Reserved; generated by the CD-ROM drive in the media bay to indicate that the drive requires the attention of the microprocessor
Memory Allocations
Table 4
provides a map of the conventional memory area. When the microprocessor or a program addresses a location within the conventional
memory range, it is physically addressing a location in main memory.
NOTE: To view memory allocations in Windows 98, click the Start button, point to Settings, and click Control Panel. Double-click the
System icon. Click the Device Manager tab, and then double-click Computer.
Table 4. Conventional Memory Map
Address Range
0000h-003FFh
00400h-00FFFF
00500h-005FFh
00600h-9FBFFh
Table 5
provides a map of the upper memory area. Some of these addresses are dedicated to various system devices, such as the system/video
basic input/output system (BIOS). Others are available for use by expansion cards and/or an expanded memory manager (EMM).
When the microprocessor or a program addresses a location within the upper memory area, it is physically addressing a location within one of
these devices.
Table 5. Upper Memory Map
Address Range
0009FC00-0009FFFF
000A0000-000BFFFF
000C0000-000CFFFF
000CC000-000CDFFF
000F0000-000FFFFF
00100000-03FFFFFF
FD000000-FDFFFFFF
FF200000-FF2FFFFF
FFFE0000-FFFFFFFF
I/O Memory Map
Table 6
provides a map of memory addresses reserved by the system for peripheral input/output (I/O) devices. Use the information in Table 6 to
Use
Interrupt vector table
BIOS data area
MS-DOS® and BASIC work area
User memory
Use
PS/2-mouse data area
Video random-access memory (RAM)
Video BIOS
Reserved for PC Card
System BIOS
High memory area
Video RAM
Video RAM
BIOS ROM

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