Many Microsoft products are becoming 64-bit only today, because they're realizing the benefits of 64-bit computing. "Post-2008, we will transition to 64-bit. "Windows Server 2008 is the last 32-bit operating system that we'll produce," Laing then pronounced. "But once we get through it, you look back and realize all the benefits, and realize it was the right thing for the industry. Historically the transitions to 16-bit and 32-bit computing were difficult to make, he said - perhaps he could have called them excruciating. It was inevitable that this would happen, he went on, but now's as good a time as any given the fact that memory prices are continuing to fall. "We're in the middle of a transition to 64-bit computing," Laing told this morning's audience. LOS ANGELES - During this morning keynote sessions at WinHEC 2007, Microsoft general manager for Windows Server Bill Laing officially proclaimed Windows Server 2008 "the last 32-bit operating system" the company will ever release, for either servers or clients.
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