Out of curiosity, how does a 64 bit web browser benefit the user? I remember seeing a 64 bit version of internet explorer 10 & 11 a few years ago, but I always used 32 bit since I had issues with 64 bit not working.
Better performance, and support for more memory usage by web apps. Mostly not a big deal, which is one reason why 64-bit browsers haven't taken the world by storm just yet. Another hindrance is backwards compatibility with plugins.
Better performance, and support for more memory usage by web apps. Mostly not a big deal, which is one reason why 64-bit browsers haven't taken the world by storm just yet. Another hindrance is backwards compatibility with plugins.
64 bits is 32 more than 32... it's at least twice as good. If you don't have it you're missing half of the awesome.
lol. I did hear roomors that Microsoft was going to make a 128bit OS soon, I guess it's so awsome that nobody is ready for that level of awsomeness yet.
Thanks for your answer Sakkura, I didn't know that 32 bit on software was still memory limited. I thought that was an OS only issue.