Windows 7 home premium 64-bit can support up to 16GB of RAM
Yes.
Windows 7 Home Professional 64-bit
Minimum System Requirements:Operating SystemsMicrosoft Windows XP Home Edition (Service Pack 2 or higher)Microsoft Windows XP Professional (Service Pack 2 or higher)Microsoft Windows XP Professional x64 Edition (Service Pack 2 or higher)Microsoft Windows Vista Home Basic (32/64 Bit)Microsoft Windows Vista Home Premium (32/64 Bit)Microsoft Windows Vista Business (32/64 Bit)Microsoft Windows Vista Enterprise (32/64 Bit)Microsoft Windows Vista Ultimate (32/64 Bit)Microsoft Windows 7 Starter (32/64 Bit)Microsoft Windows 7 Home Basic (32/64 Bit)Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium (32/64 Bit)Microsoft Windows 7 Professional (32/64 Bit)Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate (32/64 Bit)Required for all installationsAbout 480 MB free space on the hard drive (depends on the size of the antivirus database)CD/DVD Drive for installation of the program from CD ROMComputer mouseInternet connection for product activationMicrosoft Internet Explorer 6 or higherMicrosoft Windows Installer 2.0
try this http://support.microsoft.com/kb/290301
Any C++ implementation Windows will do. But if you want to write 64-bit code, you will need a 64-bit compiler.
no its a bit like windows live messenger but a phone is not windows live messenger ha ha
It requires 192 GB of system memory. I am assuming that you are getting this question from the Windows & Configuration textbook by Craig Zacker, as I found that exact question in there. You can find the answer on page 15 in table 1-4. Hope that helps!
Winnt.exe A+ Guide Sixth Edition: page 526
ok the main difference between the two lies in the 64 bit. For most PC users Vista Home Premium 32 bit (which is the regular one) is fine, but if you are a gamer or have more than 4 GB of RAM then 64-Bit is the wayto go. This is because the 32-bit versions of windows will only recognize 3.25 GB of RAM.
The answer that used to be here was essentially right at one time, but no longer is. The simplest way to tell is to right-click your "My Computer" icon (depending on your version of Windows and your settings, this could be in your start menu, on the desktop, or in whatever insane place Windows 8 puts things; it might also just be "Computer" in the Start menu) and select "Properties." Next look at the window that comes up. If it says "64-bit" somewhere, you're running a 64-bit version of Windows. If it says "32-bit", you're running a 32-bit version. If it doesn't say either of those things, it's almost certainly 32 (up to 2014, all 64-bit versions of Windows say they're 64-bit; 32-bit versions might or might not say they're 32-bit, depending on how old they are).
It might be possible.