????? 32 Or 64 ?????

K9 - X

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][ HiDDeN - www.elakiri.com ][
machan mama lap 1ke use karanne win7 32 [cracked version 1] :dull:

64 eka & 32 1ke wenasa mokakda?

64 damahama speed up wenawada?

:confused: , poddak danna una kiyanwada?

64 dana 1da nathnam 32ma dana 1da hoda?

Mage System -
Notebook Aspire V5-471G
2nd Generation Intel® Core™ i3-2367M Processor (1.4GHz, 3MB L3 cache)
4GB DDR3 SDRAM
500GB hard drive

:eek::eek::eek:

 

markhaloce

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32 බිට් වල සේරම නිරූපණය කරන්නෙ බිට් තිස් දෙකකින්.
64 bit වල සේරම නිරූපණය කරන්නෙ බිට් හැට හතරකිං..

උඹේ රැම් එක 4 හින්ද, විජීඒ කැශ් ගනිද්දි තව වැඩිවෙන හින්ද 86 දාන්න එපා.
64 දාපං..
නැත්තං රැම් එකේ ඉතුරු වෙන ස්පේස් එකට දුම් අල්ල අල්ල ලස්සනට තියං ඉන්නයි වෙන්නෙ...
 

sasliit

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ලොවෙත් නැති තැනක

32 බිට් වල සේරම නිරූපණය කරන්නෙ බිට් තිස් දෙකකින්.
64 bit වල සේරම නිරූපණය කරන්නෙ බිට් හැට හතරකිං..

උඹේ රැම් එක 4 හින්ද, විජීඒ කැශ් ගනිද්දි තව වැඩිවෙන හින්ද 86 දාන්න එපා.
64 දාපං..
නැත්තං රැම් එකේ ඉතුරු වෙන ස්පේස් එකට දුම් අල්ල අල්ල ලස්සනට තියං ඉන්නයි වෙන්නෙ...
32 ekata 86 kiyanne ey ban :eek:
 

markhaloce

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32 ekata 86 kiyanne ey ban


Technically x86 simply refers to a family of processors and the instruction set they all use. It doesn't actually say anything specific about data sizes.

x86 started out as a 16-bit instruction set for 16-bit processors (the 8086 and 8088 processors), then was extended to a 32-bit instruction set for 32-bit processors (80386 and 80486), and now has been extended to a 64-bit instruction set for 64-bit processors. It used to be written as 80x86 to reflect the changing value in the middle of the chip model numbers, but somewhere along the line the 80 in the front was dropped, leaving just x86.

Blame the Pentium and it's offspring for changing the way in which processors were named and marketed, although all newer processors using Intel's x86 instruction set are still referred to as x86, i386, or i686 compatible (which means they all use extensions of the original 8086 instruction set).

x64 is really the odd man out here. The first name for the 64-bit extension to the x86 set was called x86-64. It was later named to AMD64 (because AMD were the ones to come up with the 64-bit extension originally). Intel licensed the 64-bit instruction set and named their version EM64T. Both instruction sets and the processors that use them are all still considered x86.

src: https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20100418155720AAUVVmS