• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

do i have to get vista ultimate64bit inorder to optimize a Cord 2 Duo cpu?

Solodays

Senior member
im getting a new pc which comes w/ a core 2 duo, since it's 64bit, do i really need windows ultimate inorder to optimize the cpu?
 
No, i wouldn't put it that way.

You can read twenty zillion threads on the benefits & drawbacks of Vista x64 vs. x86 etc etc. in the OS section.
 
Originally posted by: Solodays
reason? thought the c2d was design with 64bit in mind?

My Land Rover was designed with off-road in mind, but it doesn't mean I go cross-country when there's a perfectly good road 🙂
 
Originally posted by: betasub
Originally posted by: Solodays
reason? thought the c2d was design with 64bit in mind?

My Land Rover was designed with off-road in mind, but it doesn't mean I go cross-country when there's a perfectly good road 🙂

LOL...QFT

But getting 64 OS won't hurt in the long run since the whole world is going to transition that way, anyway.
 
Driver issues and binary compatibility issues.

Even if they are minor, would you rather get product A which is supported by an overwhelming majority of software and hardware, or Product B for the same price and features but isn't supported as well.

Future-proofing is rubbish, if everyone has one thing it's not going to go away soon for the average user, and 3GB+ of memory is not necessary for 99% of users.

Or, of course, you could get Linux because it's free and tends to have as good 32-bit as 64-bit support because you have access to all of the source code.
 
If you buy an upgrade version of Vista, you can install 32-bit now and upgrade to 64-bit later for free. (this isn't the case with OEM)

Personally I'm running 32-bit, but that's because I got it the day it came out. Installing 64-bit now is fairly safe - most applications now work with 64-bit Vista.
 
I've been using x64 since late 2005 and Vista 64 for a "long" two months now w/o any issue e.g. gaming apps etc.

 
Back
Top