Quoting Sir-Astral, reply 7
To Jafo & NTJedi:
Your comments make no sense. If this is all about moving forward, then are you saying that SSD's are taking a step backward in technology?
No one ever said that or even implied such a statement. SSD is a step forward as we've been agreeing with the OP of this topic.
Quoting Sir-Astral, reply 7
Additionally, just because the "OS" is 64-bit does not mean that the software is 64-Bit. I do understand what you are trying to say, but you are trully being short sighted on the issue. I would explain it to you in detail but that will take some time. Let me know if you really want me to make a lengthy post on why you are not correct!
Once again no one ever said the 64bit OS means 64bit applications. If you've been following the games being developed by Stardock you'd know they are currently developing a 64bit version for their game Elemental. It seems your views are stuck in a today only mindframe and just unable to see the purpose of tomorrow... hence completely missing the statement regarding 640k. lol
The purpose of moving everyone towards a 64bit OS would allow developers to provide greater games and even a few greater applications. You don't realize how the 4gb memory limitation of a 32bit OS is limiting developers in their creation of games.
Quoting Sir-Astral, reply 7
And to the guy that made the rather lame comment about 640k being more than anyone will ever need. You should probably not comment on this topic anymore. I don't think there is a single post in this entire thread from anyone that indicated that any amount of anything would be more than anyone would ever need.
That "guy" is at least a Stardock moderator on the forums and may even be one of the developers at Stardock. Considering you've completely missed his point about 640k, I doubt your 19 year old personality could even grasp the points we're trying to describe.
Thanks for the link, it was enlightening. I do appreciate you correcting me regarding the matter. However if you go back and read my post I said "6 gigs for now".
If an english teacher were standing here they would tell you that the words "for now" do not equate to "forever". My failure in my quote was believing in hearsay without verifying facts, yours is not being able to understand the words in front of your very eyes.
I do not care who is a developer or not, if you take something out of context then its your own fault. And job description means nothing. There are probably 10 year old children in Japan that could out perform/out grasp said developer and myself, but no one would give that 10 year old genius any credit because he does not have a title.
Yes the purpose of moving to 64-bit is for more power. But do you think a developer is going to become lazy just because you have Phat Loads of RAM to run your applications? No, they are going to continue to optimize code and minimize RAM usages, because all to often your machine will be sharing space with other programs. Furthermore an application will not just launch ALL of its modules because that would waste resources very unnecessarilly. You are being far to short sighted in the matter.
It's ridiculous to think that just because you have RAM that your machine is going to use it! Even if it is 64-Bit. A program will only use as much RAM as necessary. If you look back at the is 6gigs enough article you will find that Windows loads up RAM a little bit more based on a Ratio. If you have 3 gigs of Ram it uses 880 megs for system. If you have 6 gigs of RAM is used 1.11 gigs and if you have 12 gigs it used 1.43 gigs. Futhermore boot times and load times were not affected very much. Regardless of prefetch, superfetch, or dogfetch... SSD will add more performance.
The proof is here in front of everyone, but just as you can bring a horse to water, you can't make said horse drink it.
This is not opinion. If you have at least 3 gigs of RAM, you WILL get more performance out of your machine if you upgrade to SSD instead of upgrading more RAM. It's fact, not opinion, and more than enough tests and benchmarks prove it far beyond any shadow of doubt. All that remains is the question of cheap, capacity, performance. And you only get to pick 2 of the 3! You can have capacity and performance, but its not cheap. You can be cheap and have good capacity, but you won't get performance. You can have cheap and performance, but you will not get much capacity.