Yes but as more programs are built for it there will be more reasons to run it.Originally posted by: Nothinman
If you mean "Can I buy a Hammer and boom my copy of XP is 64-bit", no You'll have to re-buy XP for it to run in 64-bit mode.
And even then 99.9% of your apps will be 32-bit anyway. The only things MS is porting is Exchange, SQL and maybe IIS. You'll probably see some things like Mozilla recompiled quickly (because it already runs on other 64-bit platforms) but really there's no gain in using the 64-bit versions over the 32-bit ones.
The only thing gained from using a 64-bit processor is a bigger address space, and I doubt you've got many apps that need more than 2G of memory for just themselves. Current IA32 processors can already do math on 64-bit integers and floats with SSE and the like.
Yes but as more programs are built for it there will be more reasons to run it.
That and it's some pretty cool bragging rights to say you run a 64-b processor for your desktop...
This is true, but in years to come it will open the door for much more complex software applications that require all the extra addresses.Originally posted by: Nothinman
Even if programs are compiled for it the very large majority will see no benefits.
developers will eventually require the 64-bit processing simply because their programs will need to be more and more complex to carry out the tasks laid before them.
That similar laziness is what dragged the adoption of NT4, I'm sure the 64-bit transition will take some time too, but lets hope its not as painful. I want the Hammer too -- to run 32bit faster than anything else on the market AND to run 64bit. Can't do that with any other chip that is known to be coming out this year.I don't know about complexity, I forsee a lot of laziness though =)
That similar laziness is what dragged the adoption of NT4, I'm sure the 64-bit transition will take some time too, but lets hope its not as painful. I want the Hammer too -- to run 32bit faster than anything else on the market AND to run 64bit. Can't do that with any other chip that is known to be coming out this year.
Originally posted by: Nothinman
That similar laziness is what dragged the adoption of NT4, I'm sure the 64-bit transition will take some time too, but lets hope its not as painful. I want the Hammer too -- to run 32bit faster than anything else on the market AND to run 64bit. Can't do that with any other chip that is known to be coming out this year.
Unless MS changes their story very soon you won't be doing a whole helluva lot on that shiny new 64-bit chip this year.
You and Nothinman may want to read that URL more carefully.Originally posted by: Viper GTS
If that holds to be true, AMD's Hammer is SCREWED.Originally posted by: Nothinman
That similar laziness is what dragged the adoption of NT4, I'm sure the 64-bit transition will take some time too, but lets hope its not as painful. I want the Hammer too -- to run 32bit faster than anything else on the market AND to run 64bit. Can't do that with any other chip that is known to be coming out this year.
Unless MS changes their story very soon you won't be doing a whole helluva lot on that shiny new 64-bit chip this year.
Overview of Windows XP 64-Bit Edition Windows XP 64-Bit Edition supports the latest class of Intel Itanium processors designed for users who need to create and manipulate large amounts of complex data.
If that holds to be true, AMD's Hammer is SCREWED.
The Itanium is a server-only CPU. This is not about the AMD 64-bit version.
Hmm. Good point. Drivers may be a problem for a while after the initial release--There are a lot of 32-bit drivers out there to port. Most of them can probably simply be recompiled, but then it's an issue of whether the vendor will do that.Originally posted by: Nothinman
The Itanium is a server-only CPU. This is not about the AMD 64-bit version.
Most of the codebase is the same, they'll both be affected by a lot of what's on that list. And anyway some of the apps will be fine running in 32-bit mode (hell 99% of apps available are fine with 32-bits of address space) but there's drivers and kernel-mode things on that list too. I really wouldn't want to try running a 32-bit driver on an OS running in 64-bit mode.
Originally posted by: Nothinman
Yes but as more programs are built for it there will be more reasons to run it.
Even if programs are compiled for it the very large majority will see no benefits.
That and it's some pretty cool bragging rights to say you run a 64-b processor for your desktop...
I already own an Alpha and an UltraSparc, the Alpha would be my desktop if it ran q3.
There are some things that are screaming for 64 bit or better OSes
Originally posted by: Nothinman
There are some things that are screaming for 64 bit or better OSes
And 99% of them have it already. Anyone who isn't buying a 64-bit processor when they truly need it because it doesn't run Windows should be fired. Why would anyone buy an Itanium box for mission critical data when the chip has virtually no real world testing, that would be stupid.
It seems like having >4GB of RAM is rediculous now, but I imagine that KDE7 and Windows 2008 will be more than happy to occupy that much memory.
t seems like having >4GB of RAM is rediculous now, but I imagine that KDE7 and Windows 2008 will be more than happy to occupy that much memory.
I already have some servers at work with 4GB of RAM, and most of it isn't going to waste. Java application servers can swill memory like a fat guy eating at an all you can eat buffet