sun_kissed_0
New Member
Ugh, this is going to sound so stupid, but how the heck do i post something on someone's profile? Pies i'm trying to say something back to you lol but i donno how!!
It's still not correct. A 64-bit OS can address 64-bit memory locations and use 64-bit instructions (as well as the widened/extra registers if we do a x86 vs x86-64) comparison. However, the "bittiness" has nothing to do with how much data the OS/CPU can handle at a time - mainstream CPUs and even some older 32-bit CPUs have instructions to process much more data than that at a time.
Some examples:
Phenom (64-bit) can perform 128-bits worth FP calculations at once (i.e. one 128-bit FPU calculation at once, or more lower-precision (64/32-bit) at once in parallel). That's just one example, many processors (Including current Intel's offerings, or Nehalem at least) have 128-bit or even 256-bit data paths, allowing that much data to be processed any one given moment.
Sandy Bridge (64-bit) is to have 256-bits wide data paths.
SSE2 (introduced with 32-bit P4) supports 64-bit FP calculations.
Ugh, this is going to sound so stupid, but how the heck do i post something on someone's profile? Pies i'm trying to say something back to you lol but i donno how!!
Ugh, this is going to sound so stupid, but how the heck do i post something on someone's profile? Pies I'm trying to say something back to you laugh out loud but I dunno how!!
It can be cheaper, but you're looking for quality. Computers that you get pre-built most of the time use not-so-good quality parts.
Buying the stuff your self, separate gives you freedom to get quality parts. Not to mention it's fun to build computers.
I think you need to have 100 posts at least to do this. It is a protection feature to keep those out who just want to post junk on other peoples' profiles.
Wow, you guys are confusing the hell out of her.
...........and the rest that he said