Microsoft is keen to stir up enthusiasm for Windows Vista, but when it comes to the 64-bit edition of the recently released operating system, the software giant is sending decidedly mixed messages.
Microsoft is keen to stir up enthusiasm for Windows Vista, but when it comes to the 64-bit edition of the recently released operating system, the software giant is sending decidedly mixed messages.
A quick, informal survey of Best Buy shows that most consumer laptops now come standard with the 64-bit version of Vista. Brooke Crothers Former CNET contributor Brooke Crothers writes about mobile ...