Quote:
Originally Posted by masraum
Imagine, you're running Win 95 on a PC with an Intel 486SX processor and 4MB of RAM. You create a backup of Win 95 and then get a brand new PC running Windows 10 and try to restore your Win 95 settings to Win 10. You're not going to have any luck with that.
I believe the current version of IOS is 64-bit. I believe older versions were 32-bit (which is why you sometimes lose access to some apps after an upgrade). When exactly that change was made, I'm not sure (ie, IOS 12 --> 13 or ...).
|
That's a valid parallel.
Many people including myself lost significant data and programs when Microsoft forced Win10 onto the public and did not disclose the ramifications of switching over to the 64-bit system beforehand. There oughta be a law! I know a lot of programs just stopped working even in "compatibility mode", which was not very functional nor designed correctly for the most part.