OT: Recommended Linux Laptops, suppliers?
Cliff Wells
LogiplexSoftware at earthlink.net
Tue Mar 18 16:54:02 EST 2003
More information about the Python-list mailing list
Tue Mar 18 16:54:02 EST 2003
- Previous message (by thread): OT: Recommended Linux Laptops, suppliers?
- Next message (by thread): OT: Recommended Linux Laptops, suppliers?
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
On Tue, 2003-03-18 at 13:26, Brian Quinlan wrote: > > Where do you get this info? USB 2.0 is actually rated higher (480Mb) > > than firewire (400Mb). > > You are comparing 1394 to USB 2.0. 1394b (which is what Apple now uses), > is 800Mb. See: > http://www.1394ta.org/Technology/About/1394b.htm Ah. I knew there was a more recent firewire, but wasn't finding a direct reference to it (Apple's site seems fairly vague, or perhaps it's because it doesn't work right under Mozilla). > > > This is certainly a shortcoming, although most of the devices I've > used > > provide their own power anyway. > > Which sucks. The last thing that I need is more power cables. Granted. > > If I want my USB HDD to sit in a different room than my PC, I'll start > > questioning my sanity <wink>. > > But if you want to stream DV to/from your TV then it becomes a problem. Well, perhaps, but not for me (my TV is less than a few feet from my PC), besides I'd probably use the SVideo or composite video ports on my video card for that anyway. My TV lacks both USB and firewire <wink>. > > > Did you look at Skip's numbers? > > > > Certainly. I still haven't seen the G4 numbers though. > > He posted G4 numbers! Ah, when I saw Ti I thought Texas Instruments and completely missed the "powerbook" below that. That clears things up a bit ;) > > Skip> Here are some Pystone numbers from my 800 MHz Ti > Skip> Powerbook. > > Skip> Interpreter Best pystone > Skip> 2.1 10482 > Skip> 2.2 11210 > Skip> CVS 13123 > > Scaling his G4 numbers up to 1GHz and scaling his PC down to 2GHz > Celeron levels, the numbers become: > > G4: 14012 > Celeron: 15916 > > Of course this comparison sucks for a bunch of reasons but it is the > best we can do unless we can find people with both types of machines. Mostly it sucks because Skip did it <wink> As I mentioned earlier, I doubt using the Cygwin port of Python is going to give very fair numbers on the PC. I haven't used those tools in quite a while, but unless something has changed, you can expect a fairly large performance hit under Cygwin. > > It matters because we are flaming over Apple vs Intel. Every number > > counts at this point <wink>. > > Actually, no. You may be flaming Apple but I'm arguing that a G4 laptop > is a reasonable platform for Python development. I never said otherwise. I have no real problem with Apple other than their pricing. I think OSX is a *huge* step forward for them, however I don't see paying twice the price for half the performance (or equal performance, for that matter), unless there is a real need for a particular application that only runs on Mac. Python certainly runs well enough on less expensive platforms that buying a Mac for Python development seems silly (unless the work is specifically for the Mac port of Python). > > > I would guess that writing a non-Apple client would be very > difficult. > > > > And this is why using X11 would have been a benefit (at least to some > of > > us). > > I think that it would be difficult designing a powerful graphics server > that is also easy to implement. Unless I'm mistaken, X still has > problems with anti-aliasing, compositing and 2D transformations (*). My entire GNOME2 desktop is AA. I'm unsure of the others. I certainly haven't noticed a marked difference in performance on my desktop compared to the G4's my gf uses at (art) school. Well, nothing that didn't make mine look faster ;) > Apple has solved all of those problems plus a bunch of problems that the > UNIX graphics people probably don't care about (like multiple-model > device-independent color management). Okay. You've entered graphics-design-land and lost me. This whole time I thought that there were only 256 colors <wink>. > (*) in Quartz, if you want to scale a graphics object by 20%, you just > change a transformation matrix (as with OpenGL) and send that to the > server. With X, you resend every graphics command needed to draw the > object, after doing the transformation yourself. Or use a decent graphics library. While X may not provide this capability natively (it's probably considered outside the scope of X) there are enough graphics libraries built on top of X that you shouldn't need to do this sort of thing yourself. -- Cliff Wells, Software Engineer Logiplex Corporation (www.logiplex.net) (503) 978-6726 x308 (800) 735-0555 x308
- Previous message (by thread): OT: Recommended Linux Laptops, suppliers?
- Next message (by thread): OT: Recommended Linux Laptops, suppliers?
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the Python-list mailing list