which one never knows these days).
You always can tell this. If you don't know off the top of your head, a quick trip to Disk Management will tell you so.
Not necessarily - depends on the applications. With 4GBs, there is not much to be gained with a 64bit OS. That is different with more than 4GBs.
There's plenty to be gained. On a normal system running an x86 OS with 4 GB of system memory installed, you'll see a max of about 3.2 GB of memory....even less depending on your video card configuration. A recent thread on here had that down to as little as 2.5 GB. I don't know about you, but I would feel as though my money was being wasted if that much of my memory was being wasted. Would you be happy buying a car that advertised 200 hp, but yet you really could only use 120 of it?
When you consider that switching to the x64 platform would cost nothing, increase your security, and allow you to access all 4 GB of system memory, there isn't much of a debate against it.
You would be correct if you had said 3 GB...little to be gained, but with 4 GB, there's plenty.
Interesting. I would have assumed you couldn't change the CPU or motherboard without a reinstall, so this is good to know.
A CPU of the same family could be changed without issue, but might trip activation. You can technically change the motherboard too, and only trip activation, but most people, including me, would recommend a clean install. Now that Windows 7 takes about 10 minutes to fully install, you'd spend less time doing a fresh install than you would booting up the new system, reactivating it, and cleaning up old junk, files, drivers, etc from the old board.