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qo'Qojhea
Gallente AWE Corporation Intrepid Crossing
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Posted - 2008.12.23 08:12:00 -
[1]
Edited by: qo''Qojhea on 23/12/2008 08:12:22 I'm reinstalling Ubuntu Intrepid (hosed upgrade), so I'd like to try 64 bit for the first time. I use wine+premium, nvidia 8800gt. How's eve premium + wine on 64 bit, compared to 32 bit?
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Mordocai Lecter
Caldari State War Academy
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Posted - 2008.12.23 08:38:00 -
[2]
I, personally, have had a lot of problems running it in 64 bit... but others have not. Of course, i'm using fedora, not ubuntu.
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Vryder04
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Posted - 2008.12.23 14:00:00 -
[3]
Kubuntu 8.10 x64 here, no troubles getting things to run.
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armas
Gallente Minbari Research Institute
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Posted - 2008.12.23 19:54:00 -
[4]
Edited by: armas on 23/12/2008 19:59:55 I use intrepid 64bit. Wine + premium, nvidia 8800gts (driver 180.11). No problems at all (except focus bug ofc).
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Mes Ren
No Trademark Notoriety Alliance
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Posted - 2008.12.24 18:57:00 -
[5]
I've been running ubuntu 8.10 64 bit, wine + premium, with no problems. ________________________
No Trademark -- Mes Ren, Mes Builder -- -- CEO --
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AleRiperKilt
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Posted - 2008.12.24 19:06:00 -
[6]
Edited by: AleRiperKilt on 24/12/2008 19:08:30 I was running 3 Eve premium with wine 1.1.10 in Ubuntu 8.04 32-bits fine.
Installed 8.10 64-bit in new hard drive, latest wine for Ubuntu from winehq.org, then just copied the whole .wine folder from old HD's home to new and fired up Eve...
All 3 clients run fine and even slightly faster. Only thing I had to remove was pulseaudio to get eve voice to detect my usb headset. That also fixed jitter in mumble audio output.
--- "I live in Los Angeles, where driving is non-consensual pvp" - Arric Rohr |
Ancy Denaries
Caldari Solaris Operations
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Posted - 2008.12.25 17:40:00 -
[7]
Used to run EVE on both 32 and 64 Bit Ubuntus. Now I'm on Arch, but I never had any issues with either of them.
Balance is important, but you will always adapt to changing circumstances and you don't whine about stuff you can't change. |
Amator Phasma
Gallente Troja Investment Company
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Posted - 2009.01.05 11:59:00 -
[8]
No problems with Fedora 10 (64Bit) + wine + EvE
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Karak Terrel
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Posted - 2009.01.08 22:38:00 -
[9]
Works perfectly with 64Bit...
There is a small performance increase if you are using a 64Bit OS on a x86_64 because the programs can access more cpu internal registers. I don't know if this also has an effect for EVE, but for 64Bit software it does |
Polarina
Caldari Nailortech Academy
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Posted - 2009.01.12 20:34:00 -
[10]
I never had, and never will have, a problem with 64-bit.
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Ravow
Minmatar Born for minning Aeon Empire
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Posted - 2009.01.20 18:16:00 -
[11]
Work perfectly on my system : Distribution : Funtoo Linux (It's a Gentoo fork... but less obselete) Kernel : 2.6.27 64BIT XEN Enabled Display : ATI 4670HD with fglrx 8.561 XEN patched Client : Classic BUT I find a possible way to run it in premium (disabling vertex shader)
Problem : No any one! |
Marcus Arelios
Caldari Global Sheep Enterprises
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Posted - 2009.01.22 22:49:00 -
[12]
I couldn't get the thing to run under ubuntu 64. Tried everything I knew, plus a million internet solutions. I installed 32 bit and it works flawlessly. I can run compiz-fusion with a ton of options turned on and three eve clients each on a different face in windowed mode no problem. Love the 75 fps on each one too! |
Glengrant
TOHA Heavy Industries
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Posted - 2009.01.25 18:17:00 -
[13]
Whether you use 32 or 64 bit OS, EVE will run in 32bit as WINE libs are still in 32bit. They just started work on a 64bit a few weeks ago - don't expect a 64bit WINE before 2010.
32 or 64 bit won't make much difference one way or another in most situations. You need 64 if you want to use more than 4GB of RAM (but unless you do video editing or heavy imaging work you want make use of that much RAM anyway). 64bit apps will be bigger as the default integer datatype and the address pointers double in size - but that will get you no immediate advantage - unless it's needed for a big database or some such.
Most apps are written for and well tested on 32bit. They might work just as well in 64bit - but some will have issues. Don't expect big speed advantages with this generation of software (improvements below 20% look good on benchmark charts but are rarely noticable interactively).
I'd stay with 32 for now - unless you do imaging, video editing, big databases or multiple VMs, etc... |
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