Linked by Amjith Ramanujam on Tue 18th Nov 2008 20:35 UTC, submitted by abraxas
OSNews, Generic OSes "An alpha version of 64-bit Adobe Flash Player 10 for Linux operating systems was released on 11/17/2008 and is available for download. This offers easier, native installation on 64-bit Linux distributions and removes the need for 32-bit emulation." The pre-release can be downloaded from Adobe Lab Downloads.
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64 bit computing
by perspectoff on Tue 18th Nov 2008 23:56 UTC
perspectoff
Member since:
2008-11-06

Ohh, I like the question about how many users use 64-bit OS's!

I only use 64-bit on Linux. All my windows computers (no matter their processor) use 32-bit.

Why?

Too expensive for 64-bit windows, espeically if a 32-bit system was originally installed. You can't upgrade cheaply or for free in Windows!

I have been using Gnash 64-bit for months. It works great.

All this hub-bub about Flash 64-bit was silly, and started by either Adobe itself to hype itself, or by a newbie who never heard of Gnash.

Reply Score: 2

RE: 64 bit computing
by Bending Unit on Wed 19th Nov 2008 06:29 in reply to "64 bit computing"
Bending Unit Member since:
2005-07-06

Quite the opposite here. I don't have Linux applications resource demanding enough to make use of even 3.2 GB (I never underestimate Firefox though) so I don't see the point in 64 bit. Maybe for cache like in Vista.

Reply Parent Score: 2

RE: 64 bit computing
by hollovoid on Thu 20th Nov 2008 06:44 in reply to "64 bit computing"
hollovoid Member since:
2005-09-21

The upgrade to 64 for me was less than 10 bucks, from Microsoft, and most all of that was shipping.. it isn't free but its close to it.

Reply Parent Score: 2