64bit XP is coming.....be patient...I know the truth.....I use it daily. Get your $1000 FX51 Procs.....and wait... 🙂
Originally posted by: zogg
64bit XP is coming.....be patient...I know the truth.....I use it daily. Get your $1000 FX51 Procs.....and wait... 🙂
I'll wait untill those 1000 dollar processors go down to $200.00-$300.00 bucks
thank you very much
Originally posted by: zogg
youll be waitin a long time bro
Originally posted by: zogg
Didn't Bill Gates say at one time "nobody should ever need more then 50k of ram" or something like that.
Originally posted by: jhu
The original Pentium was 32-bit already.
And can you name even 1 app that you use that needs >2G VM space?
i'd say a 64-bit edition of maya or 3d studio max would be a lot faster on huge projects.
It was 605k of RAM
i'd say a 64-bit edition of maya or 3d studio max would be a lot faster on huge projects.
Originally posted by: drag
Originally posted by: jhu
The original Pentium was 32-bit already.
And can you name even 1 app that you use that needs >2G VM space?
i'd say a 64-bit edition of maya or 3d studio max would be a lot faster on huge projects.
That's what linux clusters/rendering farms are for. 😉
Originally posted by: zogg
Didn't Bill Gates say at one time "nobody should ever need more then 50k of ram" or something like that.
Here's an excerpt from a recent column.
Excerpted from: CAREER OPPORTUNITIES IN COMPUTING -- AND MORE (1/19)
<http://nytsyn.com/live/Gates/019_011996_094929_4351.html>
By BILL GATES
c.1996 Bloomberg Business News
[...]
QUESTION: I read in a newspaper that in 1981 you said, ``640K of memory should be enough for anybody.'' What did you mean when you said this?
ANSWER: I've said some stupid things and some wrong things, but not that. No one involved in computers would ever say that a certain amount of memory is enough for all time.
The need for memory increases as computers get more potent and software gets more powerful. In fact, every couple of years the amount of memory address space needed to run whatever software is mainstream at the time just about doubles. This is well-known.
When IBM introduced its PC in 1981, many people attacked Microsoft for its role. These critics said that 8-bit computers, which had 64K of address space, would last forever. They said we were wastefully throwing out great 8-bit programming by moving the world toward 16-bit computers.
We at Microsoft disagreed. We knew that even 16-bit computers, which had 640K of available address space, would be adequate for only four or five years. (The IBM PC had 1 megabyte of logical address space. But 384K of this was assigned to special purposes, leaving 640K of memory available. That's where the now-infamous ``640K barrier'' came from.)
A few years later, Microsoft was a big fan of Intel's 386 microprocessor chip, which gave computers a 32-bit address space.
Modern operating systems can now take advantage of that seemingly vast potential memory. But even 32 bits of address space won't prove adequate as time goes on.
Meanwhile, I keep bumping into that silly quotation attributed to me that says 640K of memory is enough. There's never a citation; the quotation just floats like a rumor, repeated again and again. --------------------------------- end excerpt ---------------------------------
Originally posted by: Nothinman
I'm getting tired of people asking for 64-bit CPUs without knowing why they want it.
Im sure you ran a 32 bit processor with DOS or Windows 3.1 at some point......
Originally posted by: Nothinman
Im sure you ran a 32 bit processor with DOS or Windows 3.1 at some point......
Actually no, my first computer was a P133 with Win95.
You need a history lesson then
Every time there's a major change in technology like this there are people who question it's usefulness and there are people who understand that while it may not be necessary today, or tomorrow, or even next month, it will eventually be necessary and since hardware must advance ahead of software, we're headed in the right direction.