Posted by wil5on on Wed Dec 28th at 11:09am 2005
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Posted by Myrk- on Wed Dec 28th at 11:16am 2005
You can still run 32 bit, and 16 bit, and 1 bit if you really wanted to if such a thing existed (I'm sure Crono will enlighten us!). Afaik Windows XP64 bit is either released or still in beta- so I'm really unhelpful.
As for usefulness, I think 64 bit is just started to actually be worth while, but most things still don't use it. It was all a marketing scam by AMD- Intel created 64 bit long ago, but saw no potential for it in the immediate future.
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Posted by gimpinthesink on Wed Dec 28th at 11:40am 2005
[*EDIT*]
Sorry just found out that Intells 64bit cpu is called EM64T mush have changed the name since the last time I heard it
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Posted by Crono on Wed Dec 28th at 12:33pm 2005
Not much to "enlighten" ... I've said this before, actually. As far as I know, the AMD (and the P4-64bit stuff) is the only 64-bit chip that can even run 32-bit applications. Intel has a couple Itanium and the one gimp mentioned (it's just a P4 with 64-bit ... not to downplay the difficulty of doing that or anything)
Others have had 64-bit stuff for a long time. It just never sped anything up and became harder to write for. (EPIC architecture, which is used by the Itanium is a biotch)
Posted by Loco on Wed Dec 28th at 1:18pm 2005
Posted by Dred_furst on Wed Dec 28th at 5:57pm 2005
Posted by satchmo on Wed Dec 28th at 6:10pm 2005
32-bit suits me just fine right now.
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Posted by rs6 on Wed Dec 28th at 6:27pm 2005
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Posted by Orpheus on Wed Dec 28th at 11:00pm 2005
My 3500+ runs smooth and fast. I am not sure if its fas because it is running @ 2.2ghz or in spite of it TBH. All I know is it runs much faster than my old 1.8 P4. Not just 400 mhz faster but MUCH faster, period.
My 3500+ is also a 939 pin processor so there is still room for faster and bigger processors too if need be.
and yes, its supposed to be a 64bit type as well and is running the old XP pro corp edition of windows.
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Posted by Crono on Wed Dec 28th at 11:07pm 2005
As rs6 said, there are many 64-bit OS's out there that run great on this platform, I doubt Windows will be one that runs well though. Think about it. It's Windows, so you're going to want all the optimization you can get. I doubt they've optimized anything for you in XP64. In any case, the AMD (specifically) was made to speed up 32-bit stuff.
What chip were you planning on getting, anyway?
Posted by rs6 on Wed Dec 28th at 11:22pm 2005
Vista is supposed to have a 64-bit version as well. I used a beat of vista, and it wasn't very good at all.
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Posted by Orpheus on Wed Dec 28th at 11:27pm 2005
With todays ability to have literally gigs of ram, how does one determine "horrible?"
I only have 512 currently and zero problems with running out.
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Posted by rs6 on Wed Dec 28th at 11:31pm 2005
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Posted by Crono on Wed Dec 28th at 11:35pm 2005
Windows has always misused the pagefile (ever wonder why your computer runs slow after copying a large file and nothing is being used? Windows dumps the pagefile when it shouldn't be used in the first place for a 1:1 copy.)
Orph, you run out of ram all the time. That's what a page file is for (VMM). As far as the computer is concerned you have 4GB of ram. (not physical ram of course, but this is oblivious to everything except software and the chipset, I suppose.)
But there's other funky things Windows does, for some reason it likes using the pagefile more often than physical ram ... which make everything slower, since it's on the HDD. Just a really stupid system, to be honest.
I think the reason why is the same reason some engine parts in cars are so poorly placed (thus hard to remove and replace), they could have done it in five minutes but wanted coffee instead.
Posted by Orpheus on Wed Dec 28th at 11:40pm 2005
You're prolly right. I remember setting my virtual memory myself during my last tweaking.
I guess since I get no messages I just overlook it is all.
I did have better service setting my own. Windows didn't handle it very well on its own.
*shrugs*
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Posted by Crono on Wed Dec 28th at 11:54pm 2005
There are some tricks, however, to reset the pagefile, because most of the time (apparently) if the pagefile is acting up like that it's corrupted. In which case, you blank it out (set the pagefile to 0, restart, reset it to what you want and restart again) However, the pagefile gets corrupted just as easily as everything else in the damn system.
Also, the fact that Windows can only handle segmentation faults from software is absurd. If hardware drivers do it ... it's lock up city (instead of just disabling the piece of hardware, depending on what it is of course, and saying, "hey, this seg. faulted, you should check it out".)
DRIVER_IRQL_LESS_NOT_EQUAL garbage. Sadly, changing the IRQ doesn't always work. :
Piece of s**t.
Sorry about that tangent. Enough hijacking.
Posted by rs6 on Thu Dec 29th at 12:02am 2005
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Posted by wil5on on Thu Dec 29th at 12:58am 2005
Thanks for the input. The processor we were looking at (this is for a friend, not myself) is the following:
AMD Athlon 64 3500+, Socket 939, "Venice Core", HT2000 MT/s (HyperTransport System Bus), 128K L1 Cache, 512KB L2 Cache, Frequency 2.2GHz, Features Enchanced Memory Controller & SSE3 Instructions
I have another question, this time about video cards. Is the Radeon X700 any good? My friend wants a machine which will run Age of Empires 3. The numbers seem to say the card will do fine, but does anyone have experience with this card?
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Posted by Crono on Thu Dec 29th at 4:01am 2005
If you plan on getting an ATi card, I'd strongly recommend staying away from nvidia chipsets. Probably either an ATi chipset (they make them now too
For the video card, I'd suggest leaning towards the Pro version, simply because it has twice as much memory, you want to make sure it's got at least 256MB of ram, just so the card has some longevity. (This helps with texture compression). More ram, I would personally consider more valuable than slightly faster ram and less space. There's also a version of the XT which has the speed (1050 Mhz ram) and the space (256MB) the review I'm reading, which was written over a year ago, says the suggested price of that is $245 USD, which is about $100 more than the normal X700. The card its self seems comparable to the GF6800 GT, so it's no doubt a powerful card and will run Age of Empires 3 with no problem, perhaps not maxed out though.
I'd say, go for more ram over speed, but pretty much if you had to choose between the four flavors of X700, don't choose the lowest one, it's ram is very slow and half the size. At least chip in for the Pro, which should only be about $50 USD more. (Obviously, all these prices are objective, meaning they should just give you an idea of ratio)
Something that's more important to look at is price though. New Egg has:
X800XT for $269 That's just like the X700 with more pipelines. That should allow for faster rendering. But should is the operative word there.
That's just an example though. Give a look through some sites. The X700 will do the deed just fine though.
Posted by rs6 on Thu Dec 29th at 4:35am 2005
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