On Tuesday 30 October 2007, Patrick Shanahan wrote:
* BandiPat
[10-30-07 16:06]: True, Patrick, my thoughts are not due to actual experience with 64 bit hardware, but certainly it seems that most tests and articles to be found confirm no big improvement by using 64 bit presently.
Then you won't be using openSUSE and more???? As there are articles deriding Novell's contract w/m$ and lots of fluff about 10.3 being a #.0 version rather than an update/upgrade from 10.2/10.1.... And on and on and on..... /////////// Huh?
Certainly there are some things/apps that will benefit, but for those people that use them, they don't care about the rest.
I care and I use x86_64, that is what my system is, not i586. It is i586 compatable.
For those people that use the whole system for different things like most users, there is no added benefit.
so no one who uses x86_64 uses the "whole" system for ?different? things?
As both Randall & Buddy have pointed out, plus others here, the speed differences are negligible.
again, perception, not fact as Jan has noted.
Until the industry decides to move to 64 bit or Microsoft let's them, we're going to be stuck in a 32bit or less world. There's a fact for you! :-p
better look again. ONLY low end hardware is now i586/i686, most is 64bit and dual/4 core.
seems that being glued to 32bit apps on a 64bit system a bit like wanting to stay with a straight stick transmission because nobody will use an automatic, and there is no benefit.
ps. this argument is agrument for the sake of argument and accomplishes nothing. You will stick with 32bit because you "have read" that "some people" have had problems with 64bit and others have opinioned that there is "no benefit". But no FACTs have been displayed.
If you will recall, every new version from SuSE/openSUSE has met with the same small section of vocality denouncing the new version as not as good or a regression and they cannot make it work, the previous ten versions all worked better and were less trouble to install........
-- Patrick Shanahan
Hey Patrick, what's with the attitude? You act like somebody pissed on your rusty old Harley, when all it was intended to be was just a discussion! If you feel the need to gloat to others that you have a 64bit system with a 64bit OS, more power to you dude, but that still doesn't take away from all the problems still existing for 64bit. It's not perception when so many people complain or end up going back to a 32bit install due to all the hoops they have to jump through to get things working. So far, you haven't offered much in the way of facts either to support your arguments, just a lot of lip service trying to defend your reasons for using 64bit software on your 64bit hardware! By the way, your high end hardware was low end hardware two days after you put it together! Get a clue! Take a chill pill, calm down and just answer the OP's question, which is do you prefer one or the other. Obviously your vote goes to 64bit, no matter what problems you run into. Quite frankly, there are many reasons to use a stick shift to an automatic. But, I think that argument would be lost on you too, in your present state of mind. Anyway, Happy Halloween, Trick or Treat & watch for those flaming bags of crap on your door step tomorrow night! :-) regards, Lee -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org