Advantages of Win Vista 64
Advantages of Win Vista 64
Maybe this has been answered before, but my search didn't really net me the answers I'm looking for.
I'm contemplating upgrading my X301 to Vista 64 from Vista 32. What real advantages does upgrading provide? I realize 32 to 64 bit computing, but in real world performance and stability, as it relates to Vista, is 64 worth the price of admission? Can you still run 32 bit apps on a 64bit os? What are the caveats.
Any input, links or info is greatly appreciated.
Maybe windows 7 is a better choice?
I'm contemplating upgrading my X301 to Vista 64 from Vista 32. What real advantages does upgrading provide? I realize 32 to 64 bit computing, but in real world performance and stability, as it relates to Vista, is 64 worth the price of admission? Can you still run 32 bit apps on a 64bit os? What are the caveats.
Any input, links or info is greatly appreciated.
Maybe windows 7 is a better choice?
H Fawaz
DHL Enterprises, Inc.
"Solutions On The Cutting Edge"
DHL Enterprises, Inc.
"Solutions On The Cutting Edge"
Re: Advantages of Win Vista 64
Win 7 is most definitely a better choice, but as of now it´s in beta testing mode, so not really recommended for a main setup.
Advantages of x64:
1. More RAM addressable;
2. Raw computation performance advantages for applications with x64 native support (like 3ds Max, Maya, Autocad, Matlab incl. Simulink, Mathematica etc).
3. In theory: more stable and less vulnerable to malware
4. "Cumulative effect": it appears to behave better under heavy load.
That´s actually all about x64 advantages.
Marin
EDIT: Added 4. ...ah yes, no problem to run 32bit apps under Vista x64, but some of those may have worse performance than under x86, and just for the record, your old windows 95 16bit apps won´t run on Vista x64
Advantages of x64:
1. More RAM addressable;
2. Raw computation performance advantages for applications with x64 native support (like 3ds Max, Maya, Autocad, Matlab incl. Simulink, Mathematica etc).
3. In theory: more stable and less vulnerable to malware
4. "Cumulative effect": it appears to behave better under heavy load.
That´s actually all about x64 advantages.
Marin
EDIT: Added 4. ...ah yes, no problem to run 32bit apps under Vista x64, but some of those may have worse performance than under x86, and just for the record, your old windows 95 16bit apps won´t run on Vista x64
IBM Lenovo Z61p | 15.4'' WUXGA | Intel Core 2 Duo T7400 2x 2.16GHz | 4 GB Kingston HyperX | Hitachi 7K500 500 GB + WD 1TB (USB) | ATI Mobility FireGL V5200 | ThinkPad Atheros a/b/g | Analog Devices AD1981HD | Win 7 x86 + ArchLinux 2009.08 x64 (number crunching)
Re: Advantages of Win Vista 64
If you need to 16 bit apps on Vista 64, you can probably use Virtual PC.
Re: Advantages of Win Vista 64
In my opinion, the main practical advantage of Vista 64 bit is the ability to address 4GB of Ram instead of ~3GB. The main caveat is that you still might run into some applications that don't have 64bit support e.g. I recently wanted to install DVD43 on a 64-bit vista system, and it looks like it only supports 32-bit Vista.
Personally, I'd prefer 64 bit, but not enough to spend additional money on it!
Personally, I'd prefer 64 bit, but not enough to spend additional money on it!
Re: Advantages of Win Vista 64
@shfawaz - check out my various posts on Vista. Aside from memory, 64-bit is faster, and in addition, will put you on the road to upgrading to 64-bit apps. In a nutshell, anything but 64-bit in 2009 and later is a waste of investment. .... JDH
Re: Advantages of Win Vista 64
@OP: just a side note... don´t underestimate the amount of RAM. 4GBs of RAM under Vista or Win 7 can be actually considered as "standard" because Vista and WIn 7 implement much different memory management than XP and can actively utilize the more available memory. Not to mention that simple file copying or burning a DVD with Nero 8 benefit from the extra available memory. Why 4 GB as "standard"? Let´s say you have some excessive amount of RAM (say 8GB) installed, then Vista/Win 7 will have enough space to cache various things (it does cache even with prefetch/superfetch turned off) and there will be enough free memory. In the XP era the users were interested in the physical memory usage (a.k.a the green bar in task manager), in Vista era we are much more interested in free memory because it means extra performance since the cache is granted.
Marin
PS: this thread would find much more responses in the Vista subforum
... and btw, if you really have excessive amount of system memory, you may want to consider RAMdisk.
Marin
PS: this thread would find much more responses in the Vista subforum
IBM Lenovo Z61p | 15.4'' WUXGA | Intel Core 2 Duo T7400 2x 2.16GHz | 4 GB Kingston HyperX | Hitachi 7K500 500 GB + WD 1TB (USB) | ATI Mobility FireGL V5200 | ThinkPad Atheros a/b/g | Analog Devices AD1981HD | Win 7 x86 + ArchLinux 2009.08 x64 (number crunching)
Re: Advantages of Win Vista 64
As a question related to this thread, does MATLAB, say, run significantly faster under Vista x64 than Vista x32, and if so what kind of performance gain do you get?
Re: Advantages of Win Vista 64
It depends on what you understand under "significantly faster", but the difference can be noticeable depending on what you do and what hardware you use. Unfortunately, I can´t give you exact numbers, but I remember to have posted in this forum some benchmarks long time ago using the Matlab buil-in benchmark function. Also not far ago I was able to directly compare Matlab performance under Vista 32bit and Vista 64bit on the same machine (the ThinkPad in my signature) and I can remember that the benchmark results were noticeably better with the 64bit version (except for the graphics test, which gave worse results for Vista x64Thecla wrote:As a question related to this thread, does MATLAB, say, run significantly faster under Vista x64 than Vista x32, and if so what kind of performance gain do you get?
Cheers
Marin
IBM Lenovo Z61p | 15.4'' WUXGA | Intel Core 2 Duo T7400 2x 2.16GHz | 4 GB Kingston HyperX | Hitachi 7K500 500 GB + WD 1TB (USB) | ATI Mobility FireGL V5200 | ThinkPad Atheros a/b/g | Analog Devices AD1981HD | Win 7 x86 + ArchLinux 2009.08 x64 (number crunching)
-
Greg Gebhardt
- thinkpads.com customer

- Posts: 832
- Joined: Tue May 11, 2004 6:29 pm
- Location: Jacksonville, Florida
Re: Advantages of Win Vista 64
Has anyone upgraded their X301 from Vista 32 to 64bit? Are there drivers available?
Greg Gebhardt
Jacksonville, Florida
Jacksonville, Florida
Re: Advantages of Win Vista 64
I don´t have a X301, but I see no problem with running Vista x64 on X301, you can find drivers in the X301 driver matrixGreg Gebhardt wrote:Has anyone upgraded their X301 from Vista 32 to 64bit? Are there drivers available?
Marin
IBM Lenovo Z61p | 15.4'' WUXGA | Intel Core 2 Duo T7400 2x 2.16GHz | 4 GB Kingston HyperX | Hitachi 7K500 500 GB + WD 1TB (USB) | ATI Mobility FireGL V5200 | ThinkPad Atheros a/b/g | Analog Devices AD1981HD | Win 7 x86 + ArchLinux 2009.08 x64 (number crunching)
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
-
T430s advantages over T420/X220
by ThorOfAsgard » Wed May 10, 2017 3:51 pm » in ThinkPad T430/T530 and later Series - 10 Replies
- 539 Views
-
Last post by dr_st
Mon May 15, 2017 1:24 am
-
-
- 10 Replies
- 3662 Views
-
Last post by kfzhu1229
Sun Jan 01, 2017 8:22 pm
-
-
How can I find out if I can run Win10 or Win 7 on this T60?
by Muse » Sat Jan 07, 2017 10:29 am » in ThinkPad T6x Series - 15 Replies
- 2241 Views
-
Last post by sebileis2017
Thu Mar 09, 2017 11:24 am
-
-
-
P70 - need (34mm) ExpressCard reader (board) 'Device description' & 'Hardware ID' in Win 10 Pro 64-bit OS
by Frankenstien » Thu Feb 02, 2017 9:35 pm » in Windows 10 - 0 Replies
- 602 Views
-
Last post by Frankenstien
Thu Feb 02, 2017 9:35 pm
-
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 10 guests






