windows 32bit or 64bit

xxsicknessxx

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If your computer came with 64bit is that the best option if you do a windows clean install? or can u pick and choose? I heard if u got 4 gigs u want to have 64bit?

also if u have a newer computer u can expect all drivers to work right?

says put a network driver on a flash drive just in case correct? Im just prepairing in case I decide to do this because of all the issues I have. I waiting find out if this would void warrenty for sure.

the computer has a issue just not sure if windows or not. Hope so that be easy fix :P

also if u got factory restore cds u don't need to back up the drive right? Just ur data? or is it worth it? feels weird backing up the drive when not working right. Btw already a recovery partion on the HD
 

My Computer

OS
windows7 64bit
other wise would be that bad to just factory restore using back up cds? I dunno clean install seems troublesome :) if windows error a factory reset do same thing right?

I miss days of running norton utilites and fix everything (back when mac was king lol)
 

My Computer

OS
windows7 64bit
If your computer came with 64bit is that the best option if you do a windows clean install? or can u pick and choose? I heard if u got 4 gigs u want to have 64bit?

also if u have a newer computer u can expect all drivers to work right?

says put a network driver on a flash drive just in case correct? Im just prepairing in case I decide to do this because of all the issues I have. I waiting find out if this would void warrenty for sure.

the computer has a issue just not sure if windows or not. Hope so that be easy fix :P

also if u got factory restore cds u don't need to back up the drive right? Just ur data? or is it worth it? feels weird backing up the drive when not working right. Btw already a recovery partion on the HD
If you have anything above 3.5 gigs of ram, you definately want 64 bit.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP Pavilion P7-1010
OS
Windows 7 Professional x64 Service Pack 1
CPU
AMD Athlon X4 645
Motherboard
Foxxcon N-Alvorix RS880
Memory
6GB DDR3 1066
Graphics Card(s)
Sapphire Radeon HD 5670 512MB GDDR5
Sound Card
Realtek Integrated Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
HP 2011x
Screen Resolution
1600x900
Hard Drives
1. Crucial M4 128GB SSD
2. 1TB Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 RPM
3. 1TB Western Digital Caviar Green 5400RPM
PSU
Seasonic S12 II Bronze 380 Watt
Case
HP OEM
Cooling
Coolermaster Heatsink, AVC Case Fan
Keyboard
HP OEM- Made by Chicony
Mouse
HP OEM- Made by Logitech
Internet Speed
20MBit Down/4 Up
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials
Browser
Internet Explorer 10
If you have more than 4GB of RAM you MUST use 64-bit to take advantage of it.
4GB or lower, and it's really up to the user, as it makes little difference in real terms.

You should back up your data whatever the condition of the drive - it's likely that your drive will be in worse condition than the backup after a while.

With pre-installed systems, you already have the most basic of system backups, but you almost certainly have applications that may be hard to reinstall on a 'new' or recovered system - and will take time to do so. Proper images or system backups will speed the recovery time.

For most people, Noton utilities (at least since Symantec took them over) proved more the problem than the cure.
 

My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Asus K52F or Lenovo B51-80
OS
Win 7 x64 Home Premium (and x86 VirtualBox VM)/Win10
CPU
i3 370M/i7 6500U
Motherboard
Asus/Lenovo
Memory
8GB - finally :)/8GB
Graphics Card(s)
it's an i3, dude!/dual Intel&nVidia
Sound Card
onboard
Monitor(s) Displays
15.6" built-in
Screen Resolution
1366x768/1920x1080
Hard Drives
750GB Seagate internal
Sundry external drives attached to other computers on the local network
1TB SSD on the Lenovo
PSU
n/a
Internet Speed
as much as I can get - usually on a dongle/phone, so <1MB/s
Antivirus
MSE/Defender
Browser
IE11/12/Edge/Chrome/FF(if I must)
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