New
#11
i know what kind of ram i have. look at my specs...
it's prebuilt, but not by a well known manufacturer. no way i can find drivers on their site.
most of my hardware is new, though i remember having to install my mouse drivers in xp compatibility mode for it to work... beyond that i guess things will work ok.
as for software, i know that Directory Opus offers 64 bit, but beyond that, i have no idea. i guess i'll just start googling!
and no, i won't be ordering from newegg :)
Do not expect a Wow! response when you switch - you won't have one. What you will have is a more "modern" platform.
Many apps do not "benefit" from executing in 64-bit. Like file managers. If I recall from some of your posts, you like graphics software. PS CS4 renders much more swiftly and gracefully in 64-bit.
Crucial.com has a reliable tool for spec'ing your RAM upgrade options.
You have reached the point of know return.
thanks for the info Antman. i know i won't notice anything, i don't use my system hard enough. i just figure it's time to jump on board :)
so why would DOpus offer x64 if there is no benefit?
Note that I wrote "benefit", not benefit. I have used dope, I mean, I have not used DOpus, but I believe that it might do some rendering. No matter. One day, all code will be compiled via 64-bit compilers. At a minumum, the DOpus author is simply on board.
What I meant by "benefit" (to a degree): some processes will only use a few bytes of memory, certainly a small amount compared to 4+ GB. Some processes will execute within a minimal number of clock cycles. Some processes simply do not require much resources. These processes will not "benefit". I would venture to say that the most common activities are contained within these processes.