• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

NVIDIA to End Support for 32-bit Operating Systems After R390 Drivers

btarunr

Editor & Senior Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 9, 2007
Messages
47,670 (7.43/day)
Location
Dublin, Ireland
System Name RBMK-1000
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
Motherboard Gigabyte B550 AORUS Elite V2
Cooling DeepCool Gammax L240 V2
Memory 2x 16GB DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) Galax RTX 4070 Ti EX
Storage Samsung 990 1TB
Display(s) BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch
Case Corsair Carbide 100R
Audio Device(s) ASUS SupremeFX S1220A
Power Supply Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W
Mouse ASUS ROG Strix Impact
Keyboard Gamdias Hermes E2
Software Windows 11 Pro
NVIDIA announced that it is ending driver support for 32-bit operating systems after its R390-series drivers. Following its GeForce 390.xx release, NVIDIA will not support 32-bit versions of Windows 10, Windows 7, Windows 8/8.1, Linux, or FreeBSD for any of its GPU architectures. NVIDIA will, however, offer support for critical driver security fixes for 32-bit operating systems until January 2019. This means the company will release hotfixes addressing specific critical security vulnerabilities in the drivers, as and when they're found, but such hotfixes won't include new features or optimizations that are part of the main driver trunk for 64-bit operating systems.



View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
Good, just let it die already.
 
How come TPU gets so many news information wrong. The support will be dropped AFTER R390.

EDIT: Now fixed.
 
Last edited:
I'm sure someone will complain, lol. But seriously, anyone rocking a 32-bit OS with 2GB RAM nowadays seriously needs an upgrade anyway.
 
I agree. If you're gaming with a modern GPU on a 32-bit system, you probably want to take a good long look at where your build went wrong...

How come TPU gets so many news information wrong. The support will be dropped AFTER R390.

They actually have the news correct in the article. I think it's a title typo.
 
Meh. Not a big deal. Didn't AMD drop 32-bit support for all the cards R9 300 and newer a while ago?

How come TPU gets so many news information wrong. The support will be dropped AFTER R390.

That is exactly what the article and title said. Not sure what your issue is?
 
It amazes me that even MS put out a 32 bit Windows 10 option. I guess that was just because they were hell-bent on getting everyone possible onto Win 10 at that point.
 
It amazes me that even MS put out a 32 bit Windows 10 option. I guess that was just because they were hell-bent on getting everyone possible onto Win 10 at that point.
Tablets, probably. There are 32-bit Atoms out there.
 
Makes sense anyway. 32bit is dead. Every laptop we sell comes with 64bit Windows already anyway. Even my HP X2 hybrid tablet/netbook came with 64bit OS despite only having 2GB RAM. I see no reason for NVIDIA to waste resources on 32bit. I'm just surprised more vendors aren't following this... The sooner 64bit becomes defacto OS type, devs will have a lot less stuff to worry about and focus on more important things.

@londiste
My tablet has Atom X5, quad core Atom and it's already 64bit ready. Any Atom sold today is 64bit ready.
 
Since Win Vista I have been using a 64bit OS. Tried it with Xp but had few issues with software back in the day.
 
Since Win Vista I have been using a 64bit OS. Tried it with Xp but had few issues with software back in the day.

WinXP 64bit had problems because no one really supported it properly with drivers. Vista was whole different story. I also started using 64bit with Vista.
 
Good! Death to 32bit!

Get main stream support for 64bit then lets start transitioning to 128bit!
 
Its not like your stuff will suddenly stop working... Even though it should.
 
Good! Death to 32bit!

Get main stream support for 64bit then lets start transitioning to 128bit!

128 bit is a long ways away. 64 bit systems can go up to a theoretical limit of 16 Exa Bytes but usually limited to CPU and OS selected
 
I'm sure someone will complain, lol. But seriously, anyone rocking a 32-bit OS with 2GB RAM nowadays seriously needs an upgrade anyway.

If anyone needs 32Bit OS, its going to be for an A64/Phenom1/P4/PD/core 2 without 4GB of ram. Windows 7/Windows 10
 
I'm sure someone will complain, lol. But seriously, anyone rocking a 32-bit OS with 2GB RAM nowadays seriously needs an upgrade anyway.

There's this thing called PAE but people love to say stupid things.

Also, 32bit code can and sometimes is faster than 64bit code because instructions are shorter, data is smaller (32bit pointers vs. 64bit pointers) and thus your CPU can run a lot more code from its super fast L1/L2 cache without fetching data from the RAM.
 
Last edited:
128 bit is a long ways away. 64 bit systems can go up to a theoretical limit of 16 Exa Bytes but usually limited to CPU and OS selected
It was mostly sarcasm at the point of 128 bit :laugh:
 
Good Nvidia and while you are cleaning the dust upgrade your decade old control panel , take a look at AMD .
 
Good Nvidia and while you are cleaning the dust upgrade your decade old control panel , take a look at AMD .
Dont say that too loud. They'll integrate it into GFE and everyone here except for me will be bitching about it.
 
There's this thing called PAE but people love to say stupid things.

Also, 32bit code can and sometimes is faster than 64bit code because instructions are shorter, data is smaller (32bit pointers vs. 64bit pointers) and thus your CPU can run a lot more code from its super fast L1/L2 cache without fetching data from the RAM.
Am I saying stupid things? I know about PAE and it's a fudge that can create compatibility problems, especially with games.
 
Am I saying stupid things? I know about PAE and it's a fudge that can create compatibility problems, especially with games.

Yep, you keep doing that by hinting at the fact that GPUs are mostly used for gaming. It surely looks like you like embarrassing yourself.

Also "can create" is a very weak argument against deprecating things which work perfectly for a large swath of people and use cases.
 
Yep, you keep doing that by hinting at the fact that GPUs are mostly used for gaming. It surely looks like you like embarrassing yourself.

Also "can create" is a very weak argument against deprecating things which work perfectly for a large swath of people and use cases.
I see you just like being argumentative. :rolleyes:

Anyway, this is a thread about 32-bit support being pulled by NVIDIA, with their GeForce GPUs indeed being used mostly for gaming, so my comment is properly in context, but it seems you hadn't noticed.

My can create argument isn't weak at all. Sorry. How about if I rephrase it that it does create compatibility problems in some instances, hence my sentence. Do let me know if I didn't dot the I or cross the T somewhere in this post, won't you? :rolleyes:
 
where is the poll
 
I see you just like being argumentative. :rolleyes:

Anyway, this is a thread about 32-bit support being pulled by NVIDIA, with their GeForce GPUs indeed being used mostly for gaming, so my comment is properly in context, but it seems you hadn't noticed.

My can create argument isn't weak at all. Sorry. How about if I rephrase it that it does create compatibility problems in some instances, hence my sentence. Do let me know if I didn't dot the I or cross the T somewhere in this post, won't you? :rolleyes:

Where does the NVIDIA's article mention GeForce GPUs? From the article:
After Release 390, NVIDIA will no longer release drivers for 32-bit operating systems for any GPU architecture.

I'm not sure I like being argumentative, but I surely like sound arguments which you're severely lacking.
 
Back
Top