I have a 4gb Kingston ram module and a 4gb Crucial ram module. I think this is the relevant part of the output:ĭescripción: SODIMM DDR4 Síncrono 2400 MHz (0,4 ns) So, any ideas which of the two ram readins could be the right one and I should trust? I guess that the first ram slot may take the lead when determining the frequency for the second module. I tried swapping the modules position in the slots, but the Nuc wouldn't boot. I can't tell if the frequencies are the same because on the Kingston it's not indicated. One is a Crucial module and the other one is Kingston. Only issue I see is that they are not the same. Those two 4gb module were installed in my previous intel nuc and they were working fine. What information is wrong? What information should I trust? Ubuntu is running quite smoothly, so I suspect it's an error (possible bug) in the settings>about info. However, if I run free -h in the terminal I get 7,4Gb.
If I go to settings>about it shows 4gb memory. Win 10 also detects 8gb, but my problem is with Ubuntu. I'm running dual boot win10 and ubuntu 22.04.1 lts. I've just bought a new intel nuc with 11th generation chipset.