Originally posted by: JustaGeek
Originally posted by: RyanPaulShaffer
I just built a new rig last month, and had a decision to make. Do I stick with 2 GB of RAM and go with the old 32-bit dinosaur, or do I spend $50 (FIFTY DOLLARS) to double my RAM and go with Vista 64-bit and the future? The choice was pretty easy.
I have been surprised by Vista 64. It runs smooth as butter. The only thing that crashes are poorly written games/programs. Windows itself is very smooth and stable. Driver support has been fine. I've found 64-bit drivers for all my gear, and have been able to find 64-bit programs of many of the programs I use. If there isn't a 64-bit version available, 32-bit apps work (9 out of 10 times) just fine on Vista 64. As someone mentioned before, I have yet to find a 64-bit firewall, but I use Windows Firewall + router + Firefox + safe browsing habits, so I should be fine. Flash Player works fine, just not in IE7 64-bit STILL, a year later (because Adobe is bloated and sucks). I did have a problem with the new Ad-aware 2007 hanging up every time I tried to do a Quick Scan. I don't know what the deal is with that, but I just use Windows Defender...it seems to work just fine.
All in all, I am very happy with my 4 GB Vista 64-bit setup. XP feels like Windows 3.11 to me now. It's 7 years old, the tech is ancient and it needs to go away.
FYI, for all those saying "XP IS THE MOST STABLE OS EVAR", you probably didn't adopt XP back when it first came out. It took AT LEAST a year or two before XP was even usable. I worked in a dev house, and we refused to support XP until the first service pack. It was that bad. So please don't spout that silliness. Vista in the first year is 10x more stable than XP was in its first year.
Yes, XP today is the most stable Windows EVER.
I only highlighted the examples of instability of Vista 64 that you mention yourself, proving that it is not really ready for adoption by general public.
Just like the XP wasn't 7 years ago, when you decided to wait.
I still have not heard about the real advantages of going the 64 bit route today, as opposed to waiting a year or two.
All you say is that you are "very happy", and that "it runs smooth as butter".
I will stick to my "dinosaur" until I don't have to worry about the "poorly written games/programs" crashing.
Another year or two.
Just like you did with the XP.