x64 on the Road

 The other day, I blogged about my fledgling move into x64 land again after a one year absence. It's been going well, to be honest, so over the weekend I wiped out my primary notebook computer, a Lenovo ThinkPad T61 that I may just cherish a bit too much to be considered normal, to the x64 version of Vista Ultimate as well. That install, go figure, went even better than the desktop install. I may be revising my outlook on x64 after all.

Compatibility-wise, the ThinkPad has been excellent: Lenovo and/or Windows Update supplied all the necessary drivers for all of the device's hardware, and all of the custom Lenovo applications are available if you want them. Software-wise, everything has gone swimmingly. I didn't have the Flash issues I cited in my previous post, and someone was able to point me to some illicit standalone installers for the Windows Live suite beta applications (WL Photo Gallery, WL Messenger, and so on), so that's all working. (And no, I can't hand out that URL, sorry, but I'm confused you can only get the apps via a combined installer that doesn't work on x64.)

I'll be traveling to Washington D.C. this coming weekend and, assuming this week of testing goes well, I'll just be bringing the x64-based ThinkPad with me. Should be interesting. Or not, I guess, if it just works. So far so good.

Discuss this Article 6

ajwreinhardt
on Oct 15, 2007
Paul, I'm curious as to whether you know anything about getting 64-bit Vista OSes from Lenovo...I just purchased a T61 that comes preinstalled with Vista Ultimate and I might at some point desire to try x64 myself...just curous. I look forward to hearing more about your x64 experiences.
Reg Jones
on Oct 15, 2007
Could someone simply post the primary benefits to x64 computng? For example, its my understanding the vast majority of 32bit Vista computers only recognize up to 3.1GB of RAM when I/O adressing is considered. With x64 Vista computing that ceiling is raised significantly. What are the other benefits?
kempcv
on Oct 15, 2007
I have a Dell D820 that I put Vista Ultimate 32 on back in Dec on. I have been happy with Vista but I was having problems with the reliability ratings. I decided that I would try Vista Ultimate 64 on it about a month ago and I am very glad that I did. The reliability rating has never been so good on the 32 bit version. I am not a gamer so that was not an issue. I do virtual machines so I do have 4 gigs of RAM and I am disappointed about only have 3.25 gigs available. But my system is faster that it was before I am not having any issues with waking it from sleep mode and I have not had any issues with drivers at all. The Thing that I learned even with the 32 bit install was to use only the drivers that windows downloads whenever possible. As for as software is concerned I am running just about all of the office 2007 software, and mindjet’s mindmanager Pro version 7, Adobe Reader and Audible’s manager for audio books, virtualpc, Synctoy, and flash does work with the 32 bit version of IE.
dougxd
on Oct 15, 2007
I've been Vista x86 too on my Dell m1710 notebook since late December last year. Just the past weekend, I used another hdd to install Vista x64 onto and everything went just fine with the exception of one single piece of software that I personally won't do without...... i8kfangui. The fanio.sys driver won't load anymore in a reasonable fashion (those who've tried know what I'm saying here) because it's not signed. Until I can control my notebook fans on Vista x64, I won't be running it. Again, other than one thing, I had no issues. I just want to keep the temps down, as this beast can become a scorcher if I let it.
mcc288
on Oct 15, 2007
Reg, I am no expert on this but the 64bit (x64) environment allows the machine to address more memory (above 4GB) and processors (more than 4). The BIG benefits would be for software that is intensive in these areas, eg. video, photo editing, gaming, design etc. Anything that has to processes large amounts of data. Unfortunately at the moment that means you have to have the hardware and software to utilize this. So, if your hardware profile is below 4GB of memory and 4 CPU's, then there is no real advantage, except for the exercise of doing it. A good example is video conversion .. At the moment it takes a long time to convert from one format to another. When you line up all your ducks, ie. hardware, ALL the software (they all have to be 64bit versions, not 32bit emulations), it should take significantly less time. Hope that helps, Dave.
Andy36
on Oct 19, 2007
I have just formatted and installed Vista X64 on my desktop and laptop, I was a bit catious at first but I came across only one problem and that was iTunes would not run properly but after a quick Google that was fixed. Overall Vista X64 is great and very stable OS.

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