Memtest86 works great to ID a bad memory module. But the only recourse with a Windows system is to throw away the module and replace it, which is spendy (and more likely with more RAM/stick) and very wasteful (if only a few addresses are defective, as is common). With Linux, Rick van Rein and Michal Schmidt built a sister program for Memtest86 to support RAMs with defective addresses, the Linux kernel support for broken RAM modules (version 2.6.18 as of today)

Does anyone know if work is being done or has been done to build a BadRAM Patch for Windows similar to the BadRAM Patch for Linux?