TraumaRN
Diamond Member
- Jun 5, 2005
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Originally posted by: JustaGeek
Originally posted by: chizow
Originally posted by: DeathBUA
I'm running 64bit Vista and haven't had one problem yet. And to that end it feels faster than XP at this point and when I have to goto work and use XP Professional 32bit it just feels slow and clunky in comparison.
To be fair I did have my share of problems with Vista 64 and I still know of a few out there, but the vast majority of problems and especially the big ones have been fixed to the point I have no problems at all recommending it to anyone:
- 1. X-Fi problems. Worked fine on the same hardware in XP and Vista 64 with only 2 GB. Updated board BIOS to 4GB (poor performance with stock BIOS) which fixed performance but broke my X-Fi. Probably could've been solved on the BIOS or OS level but Creative's November driver fixed it and all works well again with 4GB+.
2. 3-4GB+ problems. Numerous hot fixes have addressed issues with 4GB+, possibly with some of the X-Fi issues I had but clearly related to many of the MMIO/kernel-space/driver mapping problems discussed in this thread and various white papers. Two big hot fixes addressed installs with 2GB+ and a USB/DMA issue with 3GB+. I didn't have a problem installing Vista with 4GB, but I did have some flaky USB issues with my mouse and Plantronics BT headset when the headset wasn't active.
3. NV 8-series cards. At least 2 big ones here, one covered with the 940105 hot fix for WDDM memory use and the other related to general compatibility and reliability. General user reports have been positive as these hot fixes have cut down complaints about TDM (driver stop/recover problems) along with driver updates. I had TDM problems on a few occasions but in every instance it turned out to be faulty RAM and not the video card.
4. Some software incompatibility. Many older 32-bit PowerDVD versions do not work with Vista/64 and Cyberlink requires you to upgrade in order to get a working update. I just use MCE now and find it much better anyways. And yes, Flash Player doesn't work with IE64 but it works fine with IE32 which is also included by default with x64 Vista. FRAPs didn't work with Vista at first, patched since July I think.
5. Hardware/driver incompatibility. Nostromo N52 recently got a patch. X-Fi as I mentioned. My 6 year old Asus TV tuner doesn't work with Vista, so I've heard, never tried myself as I have no need for it. Some older add-in RAID cards (my 3ware doesn't work), but again, no need for it in this build.
Some other things out there I know were problems but don't run into involve SLI. It looks like AA has been fixed with most games, but I also know there was a problem with overclocking in SLI in Vista.
So no, my run with Vista 64 hasn't been perfect, but as of today, I'm much happier with it compared to XP. The difference it makes in games and productivity/entertainment outside of gaming made dealing with the problems worthwhile. Does it make sense for someone content with 32-bit XP that's happy with their performance to upgrade? Probably not, that's up to each individual user. Is there a compelling reason not to go 64-bit if you're looking to build a 64-bit capable rig anyways with RAM being as cheap as it is? Nope.
Posts like that make me want to try it, as they are very informative, and seem objective and rational.
Thank you, Chizow.
You should try it. Sure it's not amazingly different, underneath it all it's still windows. But the changes they did make were for the better and I for one hope more applications go 64bit. And honestly you should try it. I think I was lucky that I didnt hit any major snags.
But speaking from personal experience if you try Vista and really try it for more than just a few hours, you'll really come to like it and will have a hard time going back to XP.