F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Windows XP supports DDR3 memory, but dual-channel configuration depends on your motherboard and chipset capabilities.

Windows XP supports DDR3 memory, but dual-channel configuration depends on your motherboard and chipset capabilities.

Windows XP supports DDR3 memory, but dual-channel configuration depends on your motherboard and chipset capabilities.

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IHeartLegos53
Junior Member
6
04-03-2016, 06:51 PM
#11
Everything looks fine, I already own several small-capacity SSDs for the system—32GB and 64GB. The next choice will come from another option. Right now I have a 98SE (for retro gaming), an XP 32bit (any version from 1999 onward), and two 64-bit drives, with more left to add. Having an XP-64 would be ideal for the 32-bit titles I play on Win7, since I often hit the 3.5GB limit. I've thought about installing Windows Vista on an SSD just in case, because the 64-bit experience is much smoother than 7, and it won't be a disaster if you install the latest updates and drivers properly. An XP-64 would be my go-to alternative.
I
IHeartLegos53
04-03-2016, 06:51 PM #11

Everything looks fine, I already own several small-capacity SSDs for the system—32GB and 64GB. The next choice will come from another option. Right now I have a 98SE (for retro gaming), an XP 32bit (any version from 1999 onward), and two 64-bit drives, with more left to add. Having an XP-64 would be ideal for the 32-bit titles I play on Win7, since I often hit the 3.5GB limit. I've thought about installing Windows Vista on an SSD just in case, because the 64-bit experience is much smoother than 7, and it won't be a disaster if you install the latest updates and drivers properly. An XP-64 would be my go-to alternative.

Pages (2): Previous 1 2