alexoiu Titan Nov 1, 2012 39,818 249 126,990 Jan 9, 2013 #2 Hi, http://www.tomshardware.co.uk/forum/225193-10-check-windows-processor-64bit-32bit Upvote 0 Downvote
4745454b Titan Moderator Apr 29, 2006 29,241 437 93,590 Jan 9, 2013 #3 Run it through CPUz. Will probably tell you. If it doesn't, tell us what CPU you have and we can tell you. Upvote 0 Downvote
Run it through CPUz. Will probably tell you. If it doesn't, tell us what CPU you have and we can tell you.
gamerk316 Glorious Jul 8, 2008 13,234 131 44,840 Jan 9, 2013 #4 If it was made after 2006, it almost certainly supports 64-bit. Upvote 0 Downvote
das_stig Glorious Jul 24, 2009 8,281 30 46,040 Jan 9, 2013 #5 Any processor made after the Pentium-D and Athlon64 will be 64-bit, excluding the early and low power Atoms. Upvote 0 Downvote
Any processor made after the Pentium-D and Athlon64 will be 64-bit, excluding the early and low power Atoms.
IntelEnthusiast Splendid Feb 10, 2011 2,789 0 21,460 Jan 9, 2013 #6 If the processor was made by Intel® you can look it up on http://ark.intel.com/ and it will list Intel® 64 if it was a 64bit processor. Except for the Intel® Atom™ based processsors they should all be 64bit after the Intel Pentium® D. Upvote 0 Downvote
If the processor was made by Intel® you can look it up on http://ark.intel.com/ and it will list Intel® 64 if it was a 64bit processor. Except for the Intel® Atom™ based processsors they should all be 64bit after the Intel Pentium® D.