How much memory does a 64bit OS support? 32 bit was limited to about 4GB.
16 exabytes according to Wikipedia
That's where I really see a lot of long term development going. Home users will eventually have a very basic embedded OS with limited hardware. Everything else is going to be hosted and crunched by a datacenter and fed to you. It'll be sold to people as convenient, reliable, and portable. But it's really about content management and control. Dumb terminals 3.0
Yeah, but Windows is the only OS that matters for home computers (and to a much smaller extent, Mac OS X).64-bit Win 7 Home Premium has a limit of 16GB of RAM while 64-bit Pro/Ultimate have a limit of 192GB. I don't know if Win 8 will raise these restrictions.
I know it's a server motherboard, but this can have 768GB: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813151265
I don't know how long it will be though. It seems like things are slowing down in the power-desktop arena. I blame mobile devices. If I could go back in time and prevent John J Cell from inventing the cell phone, I would. :ninja:
Edit: Oh, and about this time in 1995, I bought a Packard Bell with 8MB of ram. That's 17 years for a roughly 500-fold increase, assuming most systems ship with 4GB today. My new Ivy Bridge will have 32GB.
And here I thought the old terminal-mainframe concept die in the 80s.
Don't get me wrong I can see a terminal model becoming the standard, but there will always be a significant market for PCs/workstations IMO.
Dual socket 2011s, Win7 ultimate, 128GB of ram on the TYAN?
Dual SB e5-2600s in action:
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/xeon-e5-2687w-benchmark-review,3149.html
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One can easily get a home PC up to 32GB of RAM today so if you figure the maximum amount of RAM doubles only every 2 years, we'll be at 1TB in 10 years.
Some of you people have problems with reading comprehension. Did you read where in the OP it says home computers, meaning average Joe/mom and pop?
4GB of RAM has been mainstream on home computers for around three years, and Operating System requirements haven't gone up since Windows Vista, which was launched in 2006. God-awful Windows 8 won't have higher memory requirements than Vista, either. 8GB of RAM will probably be mainstream by the next year, so it would have taken four years to get 4GB out of the mainstream. To me this means RAM requirements have mostly stayed the same, and we won't have anywhere near as big increases as we had in the '90s and 2000-2005.
1TB on home computers? Give it 20 years, if not more.
Citrix and terminal services are alive and well in the enterprise environment. Virtual servers are a rapidly exploding technology. Going to hosted models is the forward trend and removing expensive parts, licensing, and maintenance on individual boxes. Thats where the home space will eventually migrate to as well. You'll have a very small device that will connect and push a desktop & apps to you. It'll be available on any device in your home and any place you go. You'll almost never have to worry about a hard drive failing, doing OS updates, upgrading hardware or staying up to date on antivirus. It'll be taken care of for you.
That's where I really see a lot of long term development going. Home users will eventually have a very basic embedded OS with limited hardware. Everything else is going to be hosted and crunched by a datacenter and fed to you. It'll be sold to people as convenient, reliable, and portable. But it's really about content management and control. Dumb terminals 3.0
Making predictions about the future is always a sticky wicket. I remember building computers in the late 90s and 256 GB RAM cost $200; I just bought 16 GB DDR3 for less than $100. If you had told me 15 years ago that RAM would run several times faster but manage to cost 128 times less per MB in my lifetime, I would have assumed you were insane. Given the advances in traditional RAM as well as flash memory and SSDs, I have to believe that computers will hit 1 TB of memory at some point in our lifetime. But it won't be anytime soon.
