Gates calls for 64-bit software support

The shift to 64-bit computing on the desktop is nearly here, or so says Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates.

By the end of next year, virtually all of Advanced Micro Devices' processors will be 64-bit chips, and most Intel chips shipped at that time will be 64-bit capable, Gates said.

"This is going to be a really wonderful transition," Gates promised during an hour-long talk at the Windows Hardware Engineering Conference (WinHEC) here. Gates used a good part of a speech to hardware makers last Tuesday to try to convince them that the time is now to start writing 64-bit drivers for their software.

The issue is very important to the software maker. Even if most PC users are still a couple years away from running 64-bit operating systems on their desktop, Microsoft needs hardware makers to start moving now, says independent technology analyst Peter Glaskowsky.

Applications written to take advantage of 64-bit computing won't work in Windows unless the drivers are also 64-bit, Glaskowsky said, adding that a lack of drivers could well be a "gating factor" that keeps people from moving to 64 bit programs.

Hence the urgency of Microsoft's call. "They are telling them 'Please, you must start doing this now,'" Glaskowsky said. Among the advantages of 64-bit software is the ability to gracefully accommodate more physical memory than the 4GB limit in 32-bit systems.

When the transition to 64-bit will occur has been a major debate in the tech world. AMD and some game developers have said it will begin to occur in late 2004 and 2005. Ubisoft and Epic Games have already re-engineered their games to work on 64-bit systems and AMD executives have said application retrofitting is actually fairly easy.

French Linux vendor Mandrakesoft on Tuesday released Mandrakelinux 10.0 for AMD-64 bit chips. Using the operating system in 64-bit mode improves performance by 20 percent on average, according to the company. It costs US$129.90.

Intel has maintained that it will probably start to promote 64-bits on the desktop around the time Longhorn comes out. That next version of the Windows operating system is due in 2006.

Besides software, memory prices have to come down to make 64-bit computing palatable to the masses. Right now, 4GB of DDR 2 memory can costs US$600 to US$900, depending on the speed or brand, and the price has been going up. That's more than the cost of some PCs. Typically, memory only accounts for 8 percent of a PC's component costs.

For its part, Microsoft has been slower than it originally planned in delivering a version of Windows XP that runs on 64-bit x86 processors. AMD has been shipping server chips since early last year and desktop chips since last fall that expand the current x86 architecture to run both 32-bit and 64-bit applications.

Microsoft reiterated last Tuesday that such a version will ship by the end of this year and noted that it supports nearly all the features of the 32-bit OS, unlike a more limited 64-bit version of Windows that shipped for use with Intel's Itanium processor.

CNET News.com's Michael Kanellos contributed to this report.

Talkback 2 comments

    As with all things, it's great ...Anonymous -- 05/05/04

    As with all things, it's great to see that Bill Gates is so on the ball!

    Linux had support for 64-bit CPUs in 1996!

    There are tens of thousands of open source applications which are production-ready, 64-bit clean, today.

    Where is Windows, Bill?

    Of course there was 64 bit sup ...Anonymous -- 11/05/04

    Of course there was 64 bit support for Windows on Alpha produced by Digital, but that got killed years ago.

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