Sounds like everyone is trying to have a civilized conversation over this, trouble maker.

(just kidding)
I tried the OOP thing a while back, tried really hard too. Spent about two months every day with a "test project", applying all the tutorial stuff I could find and reading and re-reading the various examples. My conclusion: OOP has its place, but like any project or work - using the proper tool for the job makes things go a lot smoother. I just could not see where, for me at least, OOP being used made the end result any different then what it would have been had I just used procedural. I mean I could have chosen to do a project using OOP but I could have also chosen to use the procedural method, in other words - I could have chosen what to use, and I think thats what this comes down to, you choosing what ever tool you think it right for the job. If it doesn't work out or makes things harder then it should have been then you might need to re-evaluate the tools being used, if it does work out just fine then great, but what ever you use its your choice.
http://www.purebasic.fr/english/search. ... ywords=oop < for some past musings and experiences for OOP by users, and I know there used to be more but I can't find them now. Then of course, as others have suggested, there is google.
The advantage of a 64 bit operating system over a 32 bit operating system comes down to only being twice the headache.