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 |  | Jean Bozman, IDC |  |  | Nathan Brookwood, Insight64 |  |  | Gaurav Dua, Industry Analyst- Technology Practice, Frost & Sullivan, India |  |  | Matthew Eastwood, Research Director, Global Enterprise Server Solution, IDC |  |  | John Enck, Vice President, Gartner |  |  | Mike Feibus, TechKnowledge Strategies |  |  | Gordon Haff, Senior Analyst/IT Advisor, Illuminata |  |  | Carl Howe, Principal, Blackfriars Communication, Inc. |  |  | Peter Kastner, Executive Vice President, Aberdeen Group |  |  | Roger Kay, IDC |  |  | Kevin Krewell, MDR |  |  | David Larsson, IT Research, Sweden |  |  | Kathleen Maher, Vice President, Jon Peddie Research |  |  | Dean McCarron, Mercury Research |  |  | Mark Melenovsky, Director, Server Market Research, IDC |  |  | Brian Richardson, META Group | 
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Studio 64 Dean McCarron Founder and Principal, Mercury Research
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Note: To view/listen to these files
you will need the Real Media Player. Click
here to download.
Video #1 - View
"The barriers that 64-bit computing can overcome relate to things such
as memory addressing. The current 32-bit architectures are limited to 4 gigabytes.
64-bit architectures essentially eliminate any barriers to memory addressing
for the foreseeable future."
Video #2 - View
"The classes of applications that need additional computing performance
are things such as games, which have an insatiable appetite for additional performance
being used to create more realistic rendering or simply faster game play. The
number of visualization applications, whether it be 3D visualization of large
datasets, CAD/CAM, engineering applications, will all take advantage of additional
performance when it comes available."
Video #3 - View
"[Requirement of 64-bit computing] It's not only
a performance issue, but it is also a capabilities issue of being able to address
larger memory spaces, allowing applications that have large memory footprints
to fit within the system comfortably. And that enables some secondary capabilities.
Things like large databases, being able to deal with larger and more complex
scientific and engineering computations.”
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