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<blockquote data-quote="Jiglo" data-source="post: 817432" data-attributes="member: 3953"><p>64bit requires loads more ram to perform the same operations as 32bit i've discovered, so I wouldn't recommend that route unless you insist on more ram or need 64 bit for some reason. More ram is unlikely to speed your comp up noticeably too unless you're running lots of programs simultaneously, or video editing, or other highly intensive memory dependant software. Well that, or you're ram is slower than your motherboard will handle, but being Dell, I suspect they get their own boards made and there's no overhead in yours for improving that speed.</p><p></p><p>My two cents, if it ain't broken, don't fix it. If you do need to upgrade though, then i'd probably look into changing your motherboard first and building from scratch as I doubt you're going to get the same kind of performance for your money building from a Dell board.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jiglo, post: 817432, member: 3953"] 64bit requires loads more ram to perform the same operations as 32bit i've discovered, so I wouldn't recommend that route unless you insist on more ram or need 64 bit for some reason. More ram is unlikely to speed your comp up noticeably too unless you're running lots of programs simultaneously, or video editing, or other highly intensive memory dependant software. Well that, or you're ram is slower than your motherboard will handle, but being Dell, I suspect they get their own boards made and there's no overhead in yours for improving that speed. My two cents, if it ain't broken, don't fix it. If you do need to upgrade though, then i'd probably look into changing your motherboard first and building from scratch as I doubt you're going to get the same kind of performance for your money building from a Dell board. [/QUOTE]
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