A client of mine got the 64-bit version of Windows Vista on his new
computer and was no longer able to use his adaptive Keyboard (which by
itself costs $395). I went to the website today and it still does not
have 64-bit version.
Steve
TPiwowar wrote:
On Aug 26, 2009, at 7:49 AM, Jeff Wright wrote:
And Windows has been 64-bit for several years now. The problem has
been in
driver support and app compatibility, no surprise there.
Precisely. Apple knows that some drivers won't work right with the 64
kernel, but it doesn't know if you have such drivers. It suspects that
you probably do so the default is 32 bit. You can try 64 by starting
up with the "6" and "4" keys depressed and from then on it will run
with the 64 kernel. If you run into trouble you restart with "3" and
"2" depressed and that puts you back to a 32 kernel. A very elegant
solution to a problem that gave Vista users conniptions.
What I don't understand is why WFBs have such a hard time
understanding something so simple.
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