

This means the program will run in 32-bit or 64-bit depending on your operating system - you dont actually need to do anything when installing the software. On Mac OS X, the Reason (Version 6 to 8.1) application itself includes both 32-bit and 64-bit resources.

Or is there another replacement for still having access to my Excel spreadsheet files and graphs? Reason Versions 6 to 8.1 supports both 32-bit and 64-bit operating systems. Am I right in that? Or just too unfamiliar? Trying Calc as replacement for Excel for my spreadsheets and doesn't seem to offer a replacement in my impression. LibreOffice Writer seems more or less to be able to replace Word.

I am now trying to find out what I can do replacing this robbery.
Is my mac 32 bit or 64 bit how to#
andĪlso access to all my Word, Excel, and Powerpoint files!!!Īnd I was not even asking for Apple TV or any other new features! Very bad sales strategy damaging and robbing my proper working software without correct introduction. Do I have a 32 bit or a 64 bit processor or operating system on my computer What operating system do I have Here's how to find out if you have a 64 bit processor or a 32 bit. If still in doubt, use the 32-bit version. Mac OS X is fairly bitness-agnostic, so either should work. Otherwise (Core 2 Duo, Xeon, i3, i5, i7, anything else), you have a 64-bit CPU. If you have a Core Duo processor, you have a 32-bit CPU. Mac insistently reminded me that I should upgrade to Catalina, and when I finally agreed (half knowing what I did) amidst a number of other distracting things and the upgrade was finalised in the end I was just missing my 2011 MS Office for Mac. Go to the Apple Menu and select 'About this Mac'. I am quite confused about my sudden current position:
