To: Swordmaker
Any idea whether it’s going to support 64 bit windows yet?
6 posted on
06/01/2007 1:51:13 PM PDT by
mhx
To: mhx
Any idea whether its going to support 64 bit windows yet?
Probably When 64-bit Windows is the standard on desktops or when Leopard (64-bit) ships (probably when Leopard ships, since 64-bit Windows won't be the standard on desktops for a few years at least) .
At this point, the majority of PCs are shipping with 32-bit Windows, because most users won't benefit from 64-bit, or because most applications won't benefit (I'm not even sure applications that would benefit such as Photoshop, are even shipped with 64-bit versions).
Keep in mind that much of the benefits of 64-bit are at the server level right now, which is why VMWare supports it - seeing as they are more oriented towards Enterprise-level customers. Parallels is geared towards consumers, people who walk into an Apple Store and say "I need something to run these two Windows applications".
Unfortunately, Microsoft's problems in getting Vista out the door (which I thought a while back would be where common Windows users would really get into 64-bit software) meant they weren't able to sync up with the push of consumer 64-bit hardware (Core 2 Duos, AMD's 64-bit offerings, etc.). Developers aren't going to focus on getting 64-bit software, even if the hardware is out for consumers, if the consumer 64-bit OS is not out yet.
I expect within two years you'll see more 64-bit software for Windows users, since the hardware will be more widespread, and Vista will be out and hopefully have their first SP or two.
I have spoken to a Parallels developer, and 64-bit Windows is in their plans, but they prioritize based on what people want most first and what their target audience is. Right now, it's switchers and Mac users who need Windows or Linux or whatever.
Parallels has big plans for the enterprise arena, and they will definitely have 64-bit guest OS support.
8 posted on
06/01/2007 3:43:14 PM PDT by
af_vet_rr
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson