Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 26th Jun 2008 21:52 UTC, submitted by Taylor
Thread beginning with comment 320355
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RE: Raises an interesting question
by MobyTurbo on Fri 27th Jun 2008 07:22
in reply to "Raises an interesting question"
There are a number of operating systems that offer 32bit and 64bit versions: XP, Linux, etc.
So as OSX makes the transition and speeds up; it leaves the question - does OSX speed up by a greater or lesser factor compared to other operating systems doing the same transition?
There is room for a good article on this: pinning down the practical performance enhancement of moving from 32bit to 64bit operating systems; and suggesting which O/S are on the curve and which are behind it.
So as OSX makes the transition and speeds up; it leaves the question - does OSX speed up by a greater or lesser factor compared to other operating systems doing the same transition?
There is room for a good article on this: pinning down the practical performance enhancement of moving from 32bit to 64bit operating systems; and suggesting which O/S are on the curve and which are behind it.
Leopard (10.5) already supports 64 bit programs. I suspect the article is confused, perhaps by rumors that Snow Leopard was only to run on 64 bit processors. The main processing advances in Snow Leopard are for additional multiple core performance for applications (Grand Central), and offloading some mathematical operations onto GPUs (OpenCL).





Member since:
2006-01-09
There are a number of operating systems that offer 32bit and 64bit versions: XP, Linux, etc.
So as OSX makes the transition and speeds up; it leaves the question - does OSX speed up by a greater or lesser factor compared to other operating systems doing the same transition?
There is room for a good article on this: pinning down the practical performance enhancement of moving from 32bit to 64bit operating systems; and suggesting which O/S are on the curve and which are behind it.