
Alienware also ships its gaming rigs with pre-installed versions of 32-bit Windows operating systems and Diana said that the company is not "comfortable shipping a system to a customer with the 64-bit driver support that's out there in the industry."ģ2-bit operating systems also have troubles managing large amounts of memory. Most of the computer users are still running a 32-bit operating system, such as Windows XP and even Windows Vista. "If these companies - Intel, Microsoft, Nvidia, ATI, and AMD - if they'd just sit down and realize the performance benefit of optimizing their drivers and software for 64-bit", he continued.ĭiana claims that using an optimized operating system is the best and cheapest method to make the computer perform faster. Dual-core, quad-core this and that", said Marc Diana, Alienware's product marketing manager for desktops. "So many people are caught up in this hardware race. According to the company, one of the most efficient ways to increase system performance is to switch from 32-bit operating systems to the 64-bit offerings. However, hardware upgrades seem to have lost their appeal, as lines between mainstream and high-end parts get blurred.Īlienware is currently looking for solutions to increase the hardware performance in their top-notch gaming systems and faster hardware may not be the answer.



Quad-core processors have long since penetrated the market and lower manufacturing costs already pushed them into mainstream offerings.
