Difference between xp 86 & xp 64 bit editions Please tell me the differences
#1
Posted 29 December 2007 - 05:27 AM
Can anyone please tell me the differences between xp 64 & xp 86 bit operating systems. can i use xp 64 bit edition on 86 bit and vice versa.
Regards,
Dvij
#2
Posted 29 December 2007 - 06:53 AM
XP 64bit will run both 32bit and 64bit apps. It requires a processor that supports x64 instructions. An AMD Athlon64 is an example, but Intel has similar CPU's as well.
XP 32bit, will only 32bit apps, and will run on both x86 based cpu's, as well as the x64 type cpu's.
#3
Posted 31 December 2007 - 02:35 PM
#4
Posted 04 January 2008 - 02:31 AM
Windows X64 has many advantages on my 25 month old system with 2048 MB of RAM, an AMD64 3800+ and a X1950XT.
1. I like UT2004 and UT3. UT2004 is patched with the 64-bit patch and plays like a charm so smooth. I don't know if UT3 is also 64-bit, but is works flawless on X64.
2. Many utilities like 7-zip comes in 64-bit and the boost is noticable. Also more complex options for maximum compression.
3. 64-bit Internet Explorer. To be honest; at these days virussus can do nothing with 64-bit code. By another words: IE64 can do nothing with 32-bit pug-ins and most spyware so not all spyware is 32-bit. (or am I wrong?)
4. The superior kernel patch from Windows Update make it most hard to get access*
5. Far more advanced DEP technologie. 'Errorsafe' malware will stuck in it.
6. Cache can grow beyond the 1 GB boundairy which for games is a must have issue.
7. More stable. The 64-bit IE never locks up and the 32-bit regulairy (2 times a week)
8. Even with 2048 MB I saw the advantages clearly
*KB932596 [2007-08-14]
This post has been edited by Extravert: 04 January 2008 - 03:13 AM
#5
Posted 06 January 2008 - 12:21 PM
This is the most differences (more reliable, ...)
#6
Posted 11 January 2008 - 04:07 PM
#7
Posted 24 January 2008 - 06:43 PM
#8
#9
Posted 27 February 2008 - 06:12 AM
but the genereal performance boost was noticable - mainly the disk IO rose rapidly
#10
Posted 27 February 2008 - 06:58 AM
to use 4gb or more of ram, you need 64bit
#11
Posted 29 February 2008 - 12:36 PM
bledd, on Feb 27 2008, 07:58 AM, said:
Not entirely true, at least speaking about Windows - Windows Server versions that are 2003/2008 Enterprise or higher (or 2000 Advanced or Datacenter) can use /PAE to allow addressing of memory higher than 4GB, although usage is limited to storage of data, no code can execute above the 4GB boundary.
#13
Posted 03 March 2008 - 10:12 PM
#14
Posted 04 March 2008 - 04:04 PM
#15
Posted 24 May 2008 - 01:27 PM



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