Re: Want to upgrade computer
Gene
I doubt what you are saying is correct. Its
true that 32bit Windows is limited in memory access, as you say. But at
the same time, 32 bit versions of Windows require far less memory and I very
much doubt that Windows 10 is much more, if at all memory intensive than Windows
7 or Windows 8. Memory needs for 32bit Windows are dramatically less than
for 64bit. I don't know if this is true, but the limitation may make
Windows 10 run less efficiently if a very memory intensive program is being
used. But for typical uses, I doubt there is a problem.
All of which may have no bearing on the current
situation because the computer may be a 64 bit computer and the version of
Windows that may be upgraded to may well be 64bit. But for anyone who has
a 32bit computer who is following the thread, I think this point needs further
discussion.
Gene ----- Original Message -----
From: Antony Stone
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2019 5:37 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] Want to upgrade computer hardware is 32- or 64-bit) then it will not use more than 3Gbytes of RAM. This tends to give disappointing performance when running a screenreader alongside other applications, as well as being a waste of money for the unusable RAM. Antony. On Monday 14 January 2019 at 12:35:38, Gene wrote: > Isn't there a 32 bit version of Windows 10? What if the machine is a 32bit > machine? > > Also, what version of Windows is currently being run? You may just have > minor annoyances when Microsoft imposes two full upgrades on you a year. > Microsoft may slow the schedule down but we don't know if it will, but > some people have more annoying problems or even serious ones after an > imposed Microsoft upgrade on occasion. So my question is, why do you want > to upgrade? If the reason isn't pressing, you might want to leave things > as they are. > > Gene > ----- Original message ----- > > From: Antony Stone > Sent: Monday, January 14, 2019 5:22 AM > To: nvda@nvda.groups.io > Subject: Re: [nvda] Want to upgrade computer > > > 1. We don't know what you regard as a "normal Windows 10 user". > > 2. I would recommend more than 4Gbytes of RAM, and make certain you have > 64- bit Windows. > > 3. See the thread on this list starting Friday 11th entitled "Minimum Specs > for NVDA with Other Intensive Applications". > > Regards, > > > Antony. > > On Monday 14 January 2019 at 12:16:38, farhan israk wrote: > > I want to upgrade my computer. Is core i3 processor and 4gb ram enough > > for normal windows 10 user? -- Normal people think "If it ain't broke, don't fix it". Engineers think "If it ain't broke, it doesn't have enough features yet". Please reply to the list; please *don't* CC me. |
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