[QUOTE="GummiRaccoon"][QUOTE="JohnF111"] Oh I guess I got mixed up somewhere, been like a year since I read stuff about bulldozer for which I apologize... Anyway "kind of talking about" and "not even close to the target"... More contradiction from you.... :roll:JohnF111
It isn't even close. you are saying the 8 32 bit integer cores combine to be 4 64 bit cores, confusing 1 module for 2 32 bit cores.
The 8 integer cores are all 64 bits. There was an additional functionality that they added to the floating point unit which is 128 bit (and pretty standard), the ability to combine to do 256 bit instructions, which is actually a positive thing not a negative.
So no, you were not close at all.
Then why say I was "kind of" talking about it. I made a mistake with all this x86 and 2x 128bit stuff, I stupidly made the assumption that x86 was 32 bit and confused the 256bit floating point calculations since x86 is synonymous with 32 bit thanks to Windows.Honestly, your understanding of this is still pretty low.
x86 processors have been 32 bit since 386s. The first 64 bit x86 processor was the Athlon 64 which was released in 2003. The first x86-64 intel processor were a revision of the prescotts.
You can run 32 bit windows on x86-64 processors, and honestly, you won't really see much of a difference except the ability to use more than 4GB of ram, there is PAE that allows 32 bit OSes to see more than 4GB of ram but it is buggy as hell.
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