Originally posted by: BostonMike
I have Vista 32 bit and it sees 4GB of ram. How come some peoples computers don't?
Originally posted by: Linflas
Originally posted by: BostonMike
I have Vista 32 bit and it sees 4GB of ram. How come some peoples computers don't?
That was a "fix" pushed out by MS. It can only make use of 3.5 GB but now correctly reports the amount you have installed.
Yea, that update was a load of crap. I liked it *much* better when it showed how much ram was available to the system.
Originally posted by: Nothinman
Yea, that update was a load of crap. I liked it *much* better when it showed how much ram was available to the system.
But it's better to quiet people down than to actually fix the problem.
If you have SP1, yes, it "sees" 4GB but still will only use 3.5 at the most.Originally posted by: BostonMike
I have Vista 32 bit and it sees 4GB of ram. How come some peoples computers don't?
If this x86 vs x64 discussion is centered around the OSs recognition of 4 GB RAM, I would agree!Originally posted by: corkyg
If you have SP1, yes, it "sees" 4GB but still will only use 3.5 at the most.Originally posted by: BostonMike
I have Vista 32 bit and it sees 4GB of ram. How come some peoples computers don't?
For many of us, that is enough.
Agreed! :thumbsup:Originally posted by: 13Gigatons
If you have modern software with modern peripherals then I would definitely go with 64-bit.
Originally posted by: coolVariable
As long as MS doesn't even support 64bit ... (and I am looking at you Office OneNote 2007).
Originally posted by: degibson
How is support for 32-bit applications in general in MS64_*? Pick one of the following: Flawless/great/good/OK/poor/standard_MS_product. I've always stuck with 32-bit system stacks because I get irritated when I want to run some older 32-bit application that mysteriously dies...
Hrm..Originally posted by: nerp
The only frustration I encounter running a 64 bit OS is no 64 bit flash. Renders IE64 pretty much useless.
Originally posted by: boomerang
FWIW, I have two pieces of software that have no 64-bit driver support. DLS-2002 is used to interface with alarm panels made by DSC. No 64-bit support.
In addition, ProntoProEdit NG I use for layout, programming, etc., of my universal remote made by Philips. Again, no 64-bit support.
So, yes there are reasons to get a 32-bit OS.