Vista ram 64


















Quick access. Search related threads. Remove From My Forums. Answered by:. Archived Forums. Windows Vista Hardware. Sign in to vote. Monday, December 10, PM. ImDisk Virtual Disk Driver 1. The install package is created using 7-zip sfx stubs and includes an. No reboot is required after installing or uninstalling.

The install package works on Windows NT 3. All features and most limitations are the same in the bit and bit versions. One notable difference however is that the bit versions do not have any practical size limits for RAM disks. I'd try using Vista's built in ram-disk tool ReadyBoost 2 3. Sign up to join this community. The best answers are voted up and rise to the top. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group.

Create a free Team What is Teams? Learn more. Its not strange man. I m also with the Hp laptop with Windows vista 64 bit SP1 and ya its showing 4 Gb in system configuration but for your information if u wanna check how much your system exactly utilize your ram … type dxdiag.

After upgrading to SP1 its fakely showing you 4 gb of ram but actually u able to utilize only 3. Thank you for a simple explanation! I really appreciate you taking the time to just state things straightforward like that. You could give Dell lessons. Good post. I have seen it on my computer too. An increase of memory is always good and improves the performance of other computer or laptop! As came to this site, I saw this website below which also deals with the subject!

All four OSes show 3. Is 3GB memory is a lot? How many Software can I program? This should allow you to run over a dozen programs at once with little disk swapping. Also - side issue - drivers. Now its struggling - managed it finally, but much more difficult. When you tested 64 vs 32 bit Vista, were both tests on the same machine i.

I was thinking of getting bit Vista whenever I eventually upgrade to a new PC, but after reading this, I may have to think about that a little more. On my laptop I run 32 bit Vista Ultimate. On my desktop I run x64 Vista Ultimate. Beyond that it has worked fine.

There are however some issues with performance that I am unhappy with. Enumerating WMI classes takes up to 1. After an hour or so I am back to the 1. Opening Windows Explorer takes a while. I know Microsoft is working on a number of patches for this and can't wait until SP1 is released. On my son's desktop I had loaded x64 Ultimate and recently reloaded with x86 because he was having all kinds of problems with his online games at Nickelodeon etc.

The future will be x64, but for now we are stuck in the transition point where there are few x64 applications. Personally, I am going to stick it out so I will learn more about the differences. But it makes no difference! I also doubt the imminence of the 64 bit future - as 32 bit has become the de facto standard on new machines or my customer's machines - which I'm assuming are representative. Well Wolluf, Exchange only runs on x64, so from that standpoint anyone wanting to upgrade will be moving to x Even if you have that, integrated video on the mobo typically doesn't pack enough punch that you get from a standalone PCI-Express card.

Also, as you've discovered, the main advantage to bit will be the amount of RAM that Windows can utilize. Right now, most of us are fine with 2GB in a bit OS.



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