Tohe, I can't tell if you're sarcastic or not, but if not...
...64bit processors/OS have been available for years now. A company of the size of Adobe really should be capable of offering a 64bit version of one of their most popular products after all that time.
And "upped their game" by implementing something that SHOULD have been there 5 years ago? You gotta be kidding.
I think his point is that there are few x64 versions of major browsers out.
Chrome 64-bit is only available for Linux Firefox 64 bit is more of a side project, not a major release from Mozilla. Apparently they may be plans to have a major release of a 64-bit version when 4.0 comes out. Safari is only 64 bit in Snow Leopard Internet Explorer is the only major release 64 bit browser for Windows, that I know of.
Adobe is one of the main culprits of holding 64-bit back altogether. A 64-bit Photoshop\CS Suite should have been out years ago. An industry standard app, that would certainly benefit from 64-bit processing and memory addressing, who's users can mostly afford to pay for the hardware, and they drag their feet until 2009. 64-bit Flash might not even make it out next year.
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64-bit Flash player yet? Oh who am I kidding.
Get your priorities straight, browsers should get there first. What's up with the nonsense flash hating?
By the way Adobe just upped their game. Video Acceleration will change everything you thought you knew about flash.
Tohe, I can't tell if you're sarcastic or not, but if not...
...64bit processors/OS have been available for years now. A company of the size of Adobe really should be capable of offering a 64bit version of one of their most popular products after all that time.
And "upped their game" by implementing something that SHOULD have been there 5 years ago? You gotta be kidding.
I think his point is that there are few x64 versions of major browsers out.
Chrome 64-bit is only available for Linux
Firefox 64 bit is more of a side project, not a major release from Mozilla. Apparently they may be plans to have a major release of a 64-bit version when 4.0 comes out.
Safari is only 64 bit in Snow Leopard
Internet Explorer is the only major release 64 bit browser for Windows, that I know of.
Adobe is one of the main culprits of holding 64-bit back altogether. A 64-bit Photoshop\CS Suite should have been out years ago. An industry standard app, that would certainly benefit from 64-bit processing and memory addressing, who's users can mostly afford to pay for the hardware, and they drag their feet until 2009. 64-bit Flash might not even make it out next year.
FYI: Photoshop CS4 is 64-bit, but only in Windows. After-effects is also largely 64-bit.