You are right, GNOME clock consumes too much memory for its tasks.
Briefly checking clock.c
(http://svn.gnome.org/viewcvs/gnome-panel/trunk/applets/clock/clock.c?rev=10182&view=markup)
I can not see a reason for this memory consumption.
The calls to evolution code and the evolution data usage seems to be
encapsulated by well-organized code.
- Moshe Gorohovsky
Oded Arbel wrote:
> On Sun, 2007-01-21 at 10:44 +0200, Moshe Gorohovsky wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> Gnome clock applet is not a clock, but a huge process with
>> evolution data server and client code involved. You are talking about
>> its menus. Take into account that these are evolution menus.
>>
>> If you click on the GNOME clock applet, calendar appears.
>> If you double click on a day in the calendar, evolution appears.
>
> The KDE clock applet is similar. evo-data-server is out-of-process, but
> the kde clock also has korganizer client code, and when you click on it
> you get a calendar as well. Still there's not much reason for the GNOME
> clock to be so much larger then the KDE clock applet.
>
> --
> Oded
> ::..
> I wish Lucas & Co. would get the thing going a little faster.
> I can't really imagine waiting until 1997 to see all nine parts
> of the Star Wars series.
> -- Randal L. Schwartz (at 1982 on usenet)
>
>
>
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--
Moshe Gorohovsky
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