On Friday 05 December 2008 15:27, Kevin Kelley wrote: > If they are running standard Win XP (Home or Pro), > as opposed to 64-bit Win XP, then whether or not the > CPU supports the IA64 instruction set really doesn't > matter. As far as I know every Intel Core2 and > Pentium Dual-Core CPU since ~ 2006 has supported > 64bit instructions, even the Atom is 64bit. Also, > the "R" is for Registered Trademark (of Pentium), > it's not part of the name/model > (http://ark.intel.com/cpu.aspx?groupId=33925). > > Kevin
Kevin , I'm trying to find out why my program gets an import error on only one machine. Is there any problem with python running on a 64 bit Architecture machine or is it something specific to this one HP machine? None of my other clients have had this problem, nor have I on any machine that I've tried tested it on. jim-on-linux > > On Fri, Dec 5, 2008 at 2:02 PM, jim-on-linux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Python help, > > > > In September I wrote: > > I have a number of clients running a program built > > with python 2.5. One has just purchased an HP > > with a duo core Pentium R processor E2200, 2.2G > > with .99g ram. > > > > Only on the new HP, when they try to print they > > get an import error; > > File win32ui.pyc line 12, in <module> > > File win32ui.pyc, line 10, in _load > > ImportError: DLL load failed: The specified > > module could not be found. > > > > It turns out that the E2200 processor is 64 bit > > architecture. > > > > What are my options? > > > > I've run DependecyWalker, > > They are using Win XP Service Pack 2 > > > > > > > > jim=on-linux > > > > > > > > > > -- > > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-lis > >t -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list