On Friday 29 August 2003 07:13, Oded Arbel wrote:
> On Monday 25 August 2003 10:05, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > The things I think are the most useful in the OS-X interface are:
> >
> > 1. The ability to sort of "zoom out" where all the application windows
> > are resized to be small enough so they don't overlap, in that state you
> > can pick the window you want to switch to, then all windows resize
> > back to their normal state.  They'll keep updating in that "smaller"
> > state too.
>
> The reason you can do that, and all other neat things OS-X does, is what
> apple calls "Quartz Extreme". its very simple concept and not far from
> other things people are playing with on Linux: they map each window as a
> texture map over a rectangular 3D object using the graphic's hardware 3D
> acceleration mode. after you do that, you can manipulate the window in
> hardware - resize it, make it translucent, swipe it here and there, etc'
> all in hardware and as long as you keep updating the texture bitmap that
> represents the actual content of the window, users' will be non the wiser.
>
> Only problem is : you can't do it in X, because X was designed a long time
> before any decent 3D hardware acceleration was even thought of, and as a
> result X sucks.
> Linux GUI will always be a rag tag collection of graphical elements
> straigning against the weight of the windowing system for as long as people
> won't ditch X and pursue greener pastures. IMO - X is the single reason why
> Linux and other free OSs do not have the same desktop market share as they
> do for server installation, and probably it diminishes acceptance in that
> sector as well.
> X is a piece of software most in need of a redesign if I ever saw one.

Shouldn't the toolkit handle it instead of X ?

Take a look at evas, for example, used in upcoming enlightenment (anyone knows 
when ?):

http://www.enlightenment.org/pages/evas.html

-- 
Meir Kriheli
MKsoft systems
<http://www.mksoft.co.il

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