Jorke, I guess I should have visited the IE Team blog first. That is an
informative article, and I immediately learnt about the x64 button and
installed that add-in (in the event that I experimentally use IE9-64 and
want to open a page in the 32-bit version!) and also, using the user-agent
string to detect bitness. 

And the article specifically refers to IE9. 

I like this Q&A - 

Q: Okay, so why offer 64bit IE at all? 

Because we have to. :-) 

 

  _____  

Ian Thomas
Victoria Park, Western Australia

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Jorke Odolphi
Sent: Friday, March 25, 2011 8:24 AM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: RE: [OT] Why IE9 64-bit?

 

Probably the more correct answer is that its less about the browser itself
and more around the underlying components that are part of plumbing. There
is a post from the ie team a while ago on ie8 64-bit, most of it would still
apply.

 

http://blogs.msdn.com/b/ieinternals/archive/2009/05/29/q-a-64-bit-internet-e
xplorer.aspx

 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Ian Thomas
Sent: Friday, 25 March 2011 9:54 AM
To: 'ozDotNet'
Subject: RE: [OT] Why IE9 64-bit?

 

Good one, Jorke! Does IE9-64 crash less often? 

 

As for Add-ins, there isn't even a release-version Adobe Flash Player for
64-bit (there is a beta), so - to answer the "speechless" response - I
haven't had a satisfactory rationale for a 64-bit browser. How many browser
"manufacturers" have released a 64-bit version? 

 

And Silky - yes, I run 64-bit stuff where it is available, though (as you
would realise if you bought a machine in the last couple of years) supply of
32-bit mainboards / processors is the exception now. 

 

  _____  

Ian Thomas
Victoria Park, Western Australia

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Jorke Odolphi
Sent: Thursday, March 24, 2011 4:24 PM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: RE: [OT] Why IE9 64-bit?

 

That's an easy answer.. for all those websites that use more than 3GB of
your systems RAM.. :-)

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Ian Thomas
Sent: Thursday, 24 March 2011 5:09 PM
To: 'ozDotNet'
Subject: [OT] Why IE9 64-bit?

 

A Q for Friday. Why would anyone want a 64-bit browser?

I'm quite content with IE9, and installed the beta some time ago.
Firefox-Opera-CHROME don't interest me now that IE handles MHT file save and
load better, and I'm inclined to agree with David Connors that browsers
became ho-hum a long time ago (well, that's my extension of his remarks
about IE and Netscape). 

Just installed the final IE9 release, and the "beautiful" (ugh) website
detected my 64-bit CPU (I assume) so I downloaded the installer stub and
completed the install for the 64-bit version, but I was reminded by that
that both 32-bit and 64-bit versions are available/installed (for all the
IE9 releases I have tried). 

afaik 32-bit is loaded by default by Windows 7, and I can't see that a user
would gain from running the 64-bit version when all 32-bit apps that don't
use / address more RAM function fine with Win7. 

Anyone? 

________________________________

Ian Thomas

Victoria Park, Western Australia

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