Re: I would like Just a bit of advice about Fc8?

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On Fri, 9 Nov 2007, Phil Meyer wrote:

The problem is much deeper than ISVs not porting to 64 bit systems.

1. SUN has been building 64 bit systems for many years. All SUN platforms sold from late 1997 on have been 64 bit. That is 10 years now. Where is the 64 bit Java?

http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/jre/install-linux-64.html

2. Itanium was a bomb (sales wise) and intel and HP are now twice bitten on 64 bit platforms for commodity users.

Almost everything that HP and Intel sell is 64-bit these days. The reason that they do not run 64-bit on most of the machines sold is not capability, but that Windows is still not very stable under 64-bit.

Itanium was a bomb because it took almost forever to compile anything on it and the initial development systems weighed about as much as a VW Bug.

3. Microsoft has no reason to go to 64 bit platforms and barely pays lip service to it in order to manage large account requirements.

They are trying to go to 64-bit. They just don't push it because they know it is not stable.

4. AMD's success building a 64bit commodity 686 compatible CPUs is what motivated intel to bolt it onto all current intel CPUs.

Yep. And it is still a bitch trying to tell from the packaging if it supports 64-bit or not. I don't think Intel marketing can count to 64.

5. It is still quite impossible for consumers to recognize 64bit capable CPUs from marketing materials and part numbers for many main line products. Test: Which intel Core Duo models are 64bit capable? Test: Are there AMD Turion models that are 64bit capable that do NOT have 64 in their name?

Currently sold? I doubt it. It is hard finding anything current that does not support 64 bit. (Using it is a different story.)

So with the heart of US based computing services all dragging their heals on 64 bit platforms, ISVs are extremely reluctant to even look at it.

Unless they run Linux. I have run 64-bit since FC2 and it has worked VERY well. The number of non-64 bit apps I need to run I can count on one hand. (And they run fine on my three year old AMD64 laptop.)

If Microsoft actually did what they said they would do (and what they should have done) and release a 64bit only Vista, then Adobe (and everyone else) would already be there.

They don't do it because people want to run old apps. (Some of which cannot be upgraded since they are no longer supported.) They know that if they ever release a 64-bit only Vista, very few people will use it. They did the same thing with Windows 95 because people still had Windows 3.1 apps they wanted to run. There are still people who want to run old DOS games. (And the funny thing is that the people I know who run them do so on Linux.)

So were they really serious about going to 64bit based platforms?

Yes. They know they have to go there no matter what. 4 gigs is just not enough ram.

For myself, the actions of a company speak for that company.

Just because they cannot do a thing does not mean they do not want to do a thing. It just means they are pretty crappy at it.

--
Truth is stranger than fiction because fiction has to make sense.


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