On Sun, 21 Sep 2008 17:10:56 -0400, "Otto Moehrbach"
<> wrote:
> I have a new computer, built in a local shop, with 8 gigs of memory and
> Vista Home Premium with 64-bit to recognize the 8 gigs.
> I now see that the 64-bits is a nuisance in the current environment of few
> programs that run with it including programs I have been using forever.
> I now want to go with Vista Home Premium 32-bit and live with 4 gigs memory.
> Question: Can I reset my Vista 64-bit to 32-bit without reinstallation?
> How?
> If not:
> Can I reformat/reinstall and CHOOSE 32-bit?
> Thanks for your time. Otto
No, you can't set it to 32-bit without reinstallation. A clean
reinstallation is necessary, and from the correct medium. You may not
have the correct medium to do this, and may need to buy the 32-bit
medium.
Moreover, with 32-bit Vista, you will *not* have 4GB of RAM to use.
Read my following standard post on that subject:
All 32-bit client versions of Windows (not just Vista/XP) have a 4GB
address space. That's the theoretical upper limit beyond which you can
not go.
But you can't use the entire 4GB of address space. Even though you
have a 4GB address space, you can only use *around* 3.1GB of RAM.
That's because some of that space is used by hardware and is not
available to the operating system and applications. The amount you can
use varies, depending on what hardware you have installed, but can
range from as little as 2GB to as much as 3.5GB. It's usually around
3.1GB.
Note that the hardware is using the address *space*, not the actual
RAM itself. The rest of the RAM goes unused because there is no
address space to map it too.
--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience
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