On Nov 22, 2007, at 11:43 AM, Craig White wrote: > On Thu, 2007-11-22 at 11:19 -0700, Chris Gehlker wrote: >> [snip] >> So out of curiosity I went to the web to find out a little about 64- >> bit OSes and this seems to be the conventional wisdom: >> >> There are no advantages to 64-bit OSes that offset the losses from >> bigger code due to bigger pointers and integers >> There are classes of applications that can really benefit from 64- >> bithood, especially those that memory map big files. >> 32-bit OSes can be written to support 64-bit applications at least on >> Intel and PowerPC. >> >> So why is Linux moving in the direction of separate 32-bit and 64-bit >> builds? Is it just to remain portable on less popular hardware? > ---- > I've been using Fedora 7 86_64 at work on a fair amount of desktops > and > it works well, including Firefox, including nspluginwrapper for 32 bit > Flash and Acrobat plugins and people are happy. I'm curious. Why did you decide to go with a 64-bit version of Fedora? Do you have applications that work better or are only available in 64- bit versions? > > > There must be something wrong in your setup or hardware because it > should work well...including launch times. I strongly suspected that. I'm surprised though because I didn't have to do any tweaking to get the 32-bit version to work well. I'm still curious as to why the developers didn't go in the direction of just supporting 64-bit apps on a 32-bit kernel. -- In America, anybody can be president. That's one of the risks you take. -Adlai Stevenson, statesman (1900-1965) --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss