I used to work in PCs and in over 10 years I never saw a piece of software that could find a fault in memory (and wouldn't believe it if I saw it). We had a very expensive piece of hardware that would test SIMMs and give a yes or no but I was never sure of even that because memory failure is under duress so memory going wrong while software stresses it will not go wrong in a different device.
In our company I would test any customer reported memory in a series of working machines and if I could install an OS and run certain applications I deemed that the memory had been stressed as much as could be and that the memory is 'probably' ok. In my case recently I had a problem that could have been memory, motherboard or drives (SSD) and even though motherboards mostly have more on/off errors, they can also hang just as much as memory so I waited until I could justify upping from 8 to 16GB with the hope that the memory was at fault, and it turns out it was the memory but more by luck than judgement. So you are extremely unlikely to find anything useful from software.