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Looking for a screaming VS 2012 machine
Message
De
31/10/2013 21:51:47
 
 
À
29/10/2013 10:02:37
Information générale
Forum:
Hardware
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
01586415
Message ID:
01587062
Vues:
37
>>The fact that the world has all this amazing hardware, and this ten year old laptop works just fine makes me wonder what kind of racket IT professionals are pulling here.
>>
>>Why do you say "racket"?
>
>
>Its some kind of scam. 6GB of RAM for what?
>
>For no other reason to blow money and rare earth materials.

Of course there's the thing about GUI not only inherently requiring more memory, but more machine cycles to operate than a TUI. I recall back when the Macintosh was introduced and seeing the rather impressive-looking specs compared to typical PC-clone of the day. However when watching one run, it wasn't any faster for it - because it was burning many cycles for just the GUI. One wonders just how many cycles are being burned just to maintain display in a GUI.

And a GUI isn't the only thing that could be burning CPU cycles. A friend of mine used to play a videogame on his PC -- it was a 25MHz 486 system, and an external MIDI module he had stereo sound for music as well as sound effects. Tried same game no a 100MHz Pentium system w/o sound hardware. If I disabled the sound game would play OK. If I enabled sound utilizing PC speaker (essentially the program would "tickle" the port vibrate the speaker), I got garbled-sounding monophonic sound with stuttering video playback because the CPU could barely keep up. Adding soundcard took care of the stuttering problem, but there was noticeable difference in quality of the music (only way to get close was to get a rather expensive soundcard). I recall once installing a virtual MIDI module on a 300MHz system. Sound quality from MIDI playback was significantly improved over basic soundcard output -- however the system was brought down to its knees just playing some MIDI files (same MIDI file would play fine on an older 25MHz 80486 system with external MIDI module -- granted the module cost at a few hundred bucks).

Always interesting to watch the shocked look I get from people when demonstrating KolibriOS. Okay, so the GUI might not be so impressive, and the web browser is text only -- but it all loaded from a single 1.44MB diskette. Of course, if you remember the days of booting Macintosh or Amiga systems w/ GUI from 720K floppies (though w/o web browser).

The other piece of equipment that's amusing to show to some folks is the Raspberry Pi. Okay, so performance wise, it's kind of "ho-hum" -- but then it's hard to find something that you can get for $30 that can do the same sort of stuff. Personally I really like the Raspberry Pi -- mainly it offers the same sort of educational opportunity that those old 8-bit micros of the 1970s and early 1980s. It literally says "explore me" and challenges you to explore what you can do with it -- both in software as well as hardware..
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