Hi all!
I'm a new guy here! I followed this forum for some time and I'm definitly blown away by the quality and the use of VI!
Ok, I have a G5 but for VI I need more power and after some research on this forum I read the memory limitations for PC's. I believe 2 - 2,5 Gb is about the maximum you can get without 'reprogramming' your own computer [:)]
Here it is, I read in the SoundonSound of this May that the 64bit machines with the x64 windows XP licence can support up to 1 terabyte!! (1024 Gb)
So my question is, is this the way to go? Is this the solution for our PC workstations? [:D]
Regards,
Lennert
I'm a new guy here! I followed this forum for some time and I'm definitly blown away by the quality and the use of VI!
Ok, I have a G5 but for VI I need more power and after some research on this forum I read the memory limitations for PC's. I believe 2 - 2,5 Gb is about the maximum you can get without 'reprogramming' your own computer [:)]
Here it is, I read in the SoundonSound of this May that the 64bit machines with the x64 windows XP licence can support up to 1 terabyte!! (1024 Gb)
There are two carrots associated with a 64-bit operating system: more efficient processing and larger RAM limits. Windows XP can theoretically support up to 4GB (although only 2GB is normally available to applications), but x64 extends this limit to one Terabyte (a massive 1024GB). Those musicians who are currently frustrated that they can't load as many samples and loops as they want into system RAM are therefore champing at the bit for x64. In addition, the x64 architecture also provides more internal registers and improved floating-point arithmetic, both of which can result in more efficient audio processing.
So my question is, is this the way to go? Is this the solution for our PC workstations? [:D]
Regards,
Lennert