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Guest
Guest
What the I:M.2.4 line does is that it allocates memory to the harddrive in form of a line.02.+ wich will minimize the swap-disc space required, or, break the IC.2 command. What the guys at Black Isle studios couldn't understand tough is that a swap exceeding 8.24 Mb would ignore this older command and thus creating a system failure. However, if you replace the I:M with the previous I:M:C this will make the disc swap allocate more memory for storage. Make sure tough that the cc.2 and cc.3 operations are converted in the same way as you would convert a cc.2.2 to cb.2.2. This straightens out a few bugs found in later versions where the line.02.+ would conflict with the older I:M input. Ha ha, gotcha! :p