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Then the industry wouldn't make these profits or are they?īy my definition, hardware, peripheral (add-on) or integrated (built-in), includes the software, firmware, drivers that are required to control it, communicate instructions, set modes, direct data, make rules, remember settings, to perform a specific task. Then we wouldn't have these compatibility issues. If 64bit becomes the norm, when 128 or 256? Why have single OS machines? Why not develop dual, triple, quad boot systems. P.S.: What happened to the dual OS Boot concept. Can the technology being moving too fast - I think so! Everyone has differing information and computing in general is suffering. The questions about 64bit compatibility arn't even being answered. Sadly not everything is happening under the same time frame.
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Ideally, I'd like the biggest 32bit machine, ready to take on 64bit operation when all my programs and periphals can handle 64bit operation. Next it's software, drivers, backup drives, USB systems, cameras, video/audio adapters, printers, plotters, scanners, memory readers, and what else? So we're not talking just a new computer, with a new operating system. That's why my friends programs won't communicate with his legacy printers/plotters from the 64bit HP he has. I understand "hardware" needs to be compatible with 64bit coding. These systems perform nicely now, but can improve with more L2, RAM, MHz, FSB, HDD, etc. Some of these aren't even written for 64bit as yet. I just don't want the expense of new software, and the learning curve. " All currently running / written for Windows 95, 98, XP, and will run on any other 32bit OS.
DOWNGRADING WINDOWS 7 64BIT TO 32BIT MOVIE
To answer your question, "Why only 32bit?" I re-state "Something for my existing Flight Simulator X Delux, Autocad, (& FlexiSign), Kodak photo processing and Sony movie editing, dual monitors and game control. I couldn't log back in to Geeks! And it's taken 6 days to get attention to fix the problem. One note is the 32bit OS will never be keyboard bootable to or from the 64bit OS (like Win 3.1, 95 & 98 were). I have some Vista 7 Beta testers exploring these issues. Loss of a half a Gig of RAM doesn't sound so bad. I'm already advised Windows XP and Vista 32 can only see RAM to 3.5GB. If I purchase a VISTA 64 system eg, Quad Core, 2-3 GHz, 2-3 MB L2 Cache, 4GB RAM, AND downgrade to VISTA 32, what besides the Windows 64bit operating system, will I be throwing away in the beginning, that I can always recover in the future with some upgrading, when these programs can utilize duo / quad cores and 64bit processing? Something for my existing Flight Simulator X Delux, Autocad, photo processing and movie playing, dual monitors and game control. I want a machine that will last, or can be upgraded over the next 5-10 years. I heard the other day, very soon possibably too 128GB RAM. Typically Duo or Quad core, 4GB of RAM plus. Most everything on a store shelf is VISTA driven, and 65% of those are 64 bit. Good evening I'm hunting for a new computer.