Read more.New version adds improved hardware acceleration for lower CPU usage.
Read more.New version adds improved hardware acceleration for lower CPU usage.
Never realised that Star Trek tops can be so figure flattering.
Great. 64-bit users left out again...
Old puter - still good enuff till I save some pennies!
I would assume that Adobe believe you already have enough umph if you are running a 64bit OS, therefore they are focusing on the 32bit users initially, as that is where Apple and the press keep ribbing Adobe on flash power and performance issues.
The big growth market is still notebooks and tablets which are primarily 32bit platforms unfortunately.
Really depends on your browser preference, Firefox is only available in 32bit flavour even in 64bit Windows7.
Old puter - still good enuff till I save some pennies!
I'm pretty sure that the main focus of Firefox 4 will be 32-bit. The existence of a 64-bit version doesn't mean that anyone's putting their eggs in the 64-bit basket.
There's a reason why such little effort is being put into 64-bit browsers and plugins, and why even the latest IE9 beta is 32-bit. It's because there isn't much point in a 64-bit browser at the moment. Where is the benefit? Browsers don't normally use gigabytes of RAM or lots of CPU resources. Since 64-bit OSes run 32-bit software just fine, no trick is being missed. Adoption of 64-bit OSes doesn't mean we need 64-bit browsers.
But as I understand it, developing a 64-bit native app isn't too hard...so why is it stuttering along?
My beef with Adobe is....they have 64-bit versions of Lightroom, Photoshop etc. yet patently fail to bring out Flash in a timely matter. Also, you guys are talking Windows I guess...Linux was where I was looking forward to 64-bit more as it seems that it's a pretty mature platform all round on 64-bit. Ubuntu 10.10 in 64-bit flavour is a pretty credible alternative OS to Windows, yet the Flash plugins suck compared to other versions...
Old puter - still good enuff till I save some pennies!
As an embedded developer I have to use bit manips, and I'm proud of it
And if you do need to use them, then use a type library that has macros that'll give you types like u8, u32, s32, s64 etc, so you can guarantee the width of your variables, regardless of platform... and without messy #defines everywhere (or equivalent).
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)