Just to note, you can't legally buy OEM versions without a new machine, so with a new machine is your only window for the OEM vers.Kaboom75 wrote:There is also Win 7 64bit OEM which is cheaper but it's licence is locked to your motherboard so if you upgrade the motherboard you have to buy Windows again the retail versions are better for upgrades.
Have a look at my guide, it is possible to get a lot from x86 if you tweak a bit.Goseba wrote:I'm happy with XP 32bit, but since I'm upgrading hardware it got me thinking about going 64 bit. Staying on XP will be the easier option.
I have 4gb ram (3.6GB accessible), currently running firefox, have 3.1GB free ram, and am able to access up to 3gb per app due to the /3GB switch (and having an nlite'd installation - do not attempt /3GB without a stripped nlite'd installation).
All depends on your needs and your apps.
If you need access to more than 3.6GB of ram total, win7 x64 (or xp x64).