Post Your System
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Deleted User last edited by
Nope, no real difference, unless you have more than 6GB of RAM and your OS and software are 64bit optimised.
Thanks. I don't have 6GB of RAM, so keep with 32bits.
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Deleted User last edited by
http://blog.chromium.org/2014/06/try-out-new-64-bit-windows-canary-and.html
Opera will have a 64bits version too?
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leocg Moderator Volunteer last edited by
http://blog.chromium.org/2014/06/try-out-new-64-bit-windows-canary-and.html
Opera will have a 64bits version too?
In the future, maybe.
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Deleted User last edited by
Is there any Linux distributions which works well with wireless keyboard (sometimes mine don't work, after a reboot it does) and wireless mouse (scroll pages is too fast)?
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Deleted User last edited by
Positivo Union Touch 2500
Intel core 2 duo 2.2 GHz
4GB RAM
Nvidia geforce 9300 256MB
Windows 7 Home Premium -
blackcoder last edited by
New PC
- Windows 8.1
- Asus M5A97 EVO R2.0
- AMD FX-6300
- 256 GB Samsung 840 Pro and some WD Green Harddisks
- 8 GB (G.Skill Sniper DDR3-1866 CL9)
- HIS Radeon HD 7750 iSilence
- Cherry MX-Board 3.0
- Logitech G300
- ITU-T G.992.5 Annex B
My old PC (useful for LAN-party)
- Windows Vista
- Asus M2A-VM HDMI
- AMD X2 3800+ EE AM2
- 4 GB
- Older 500 GB Harddisk
Both are with hand-selected hardware as I wanted to get a quiet PC (FANs, Case, ...).
Laptop
Windows XP and Xubuntu 12.04
Not worth to mention. It is an old one from the year 2004. -
dimistat last edited by
Any SuSE/Novel users?
Various devices(lenovo,Mitac,Siemens),who is looking now ....and where -
linuxmint7 last edited by
My trusty old system
HP (Compaq) nc6320 laptop
4GB RAM
Intel Core Duo 7200 2Ghz
Intel GMA 945 (GFX)
15" (1024 x 768) LCD screen
120GB HDD
Windows 7 32bit
My new/er laptop
Dell Inspiron 15
4GB RAM
Intel Core i3 (4010U) 1.7Ghz
Intel GMA 4400 (GFX)
15.6" (1366 x 768) LED screen
500GB HDD
Windows 7 Ultimate 32bit
With Linux Mint 17 (MATE) 32bit and Ubuntu 14.10 (MATE) 64bit on two 16GB USB flash drives, shared (and swappable) between both systems as needed.
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A Former User last edited by
Maybe you're somehow right - but all the letters are CAPITAL. :sherlock:
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linuxmint7 last edited by
Yep, I do believe it was CHKDSK you saw. Its purpose is to scan (or check) your hard disk drive for any errors that may have accumulated on it through day to day use. If any are found, it will give you the option for the errors to be repaired (if possible). If none are found, your computer will carry on through its boot process (booting up).
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Deleted User last edited by
I have a Lenovo Thinkpad Carbon X1 Touch running Windows 8.1. It's quite a nice system.