Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-04-07 Thread Ow Mun Heng
On Thu, 2006-03-30 at 09:35 +0800, Ow Mun Heng wrote:

 If you're not concerned with battery nor weight. I suggest you go for
 the Dell XPS Mobile concept (when it becomes available)
 
 Now, that is one _*#$*#_ of a laptop.
 

Engadget just ran one of these.

http://www.engadget.com/2006/04/07/dell-xps-mobile-concept-pc-to-shipping-this-May-as-xps-m2010/

20.1 inch 1680x1050 w/ 4GB RAM.


-- 
Ow Mun Heng
Gentoo/Linux on DELL D600 1.4Ghz 1.5GB RAM
98% Microsoft(tm) Free!! 
Neuromancer 21:38:22 up 2 days, 14:48, 4 users, load average: 0.28,
0.23, 0.15 


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Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-04-07 Thread Lord Sauron
On 4/7/06, Ow Mun Heng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Thu, 2006-03-30 at 09:35 +0800, Ow Mun Heng wrote:

  If you're not concerned with battery nor weight. I suggest you go for
  the Dell XPS Mobile concept (when it becomes available)
 
  Now, that is one _*#$*#_ of a laptop.
 

 Engadget just ran one of these.

 http://www.engadget.com/2006/04/07/dell-xps-mobile-concept-pc-to-shipping-this-May-as-xps-m2010/

 20.1 inch 1680x1050 w/ 4GB RAM.

I know something's wrong here 'cause that's bigger than my CRT at
home...  I hope to get one of those gorgeous Apple Cinema HD Displays
one of these days, but I can only hope and save my pennies : )

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Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-31 Thread Lord Sauron
On 3/30/06, Mike Myers [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Just my .02c, but it seems like the 64-bit processors come with more
 hype than benefits.  Not that the 64-bit move is a bad thing at all,
 but I mean it just seems like people tend to expect much more out of
 them than what they should.

You're very close to the mark, actually.

 It would seem like a more accurate, but oversimplified explaination
 would be that it simply allows for other improvements within the
 computer, but it does not improve anything on it's own.  For instance,

Yes, you're very close.  It does allow for one major thing OTTOH. 
With a 64-bit wide word, more precise calculations take half the time
they would on a 32-bit chip.  They don't give any other real major
64-bit exclusive benefits though.  The advantages of a 64-bit variable
isn't really relevant for most uses though.  Things like MatLab are
greatly benefitted, however, normal desktop use isn't.  Some video
games are now being made 64-bit, so they'll benefit from more precise
gameplay at higher speeds, however, you are right: 64-bit en se
doesn't give any other amazing benefit.

 allowing 4GB ram, which in turn gives better performance.  From what
 I've read, there are improvements in certain things that are specific
 to number crunching, like a database with mathematical formulas.

Yup.

 However, for a desktop processor, the difference is going to be barely
 noticeable, if any, especially since most desktops don't use more than
 4 gigs of ram.

True.  However, sticking to 32-bit for the rest of forever isn't a
terribly good idea, now is it?

 It definitely seems to be a difficult thing to explain though due to
 the nature of the processor.  Most people think simply 'more numbers =
 more speed', but that's not really case, and surely not the point.
 Since around the mid 90's, processor speeds have steadily increased,
 but in the last couple of years, that increase has halted.

Not really.  AMD is still making their chips more efficient and
faster, though the new fad is to add more cores.  However, eventually
this will still limit threads to the speed of one core, which'll
prompt more and more rapid speed increases.  Just be patient; you
don't need all that number-crunching power right now, do you? ; )

 Supposedly, the speeds have been maxed out for the size of the
 processors, so that's why the manufacturers are trying different
 routes, like hyperthreading, dual core, multi-core, and 64-bit.  None

Well, they also need to make the thing smaller.  We're still on what? 
95 nanometre?  Smaller means more transistors in the same area.

 of these features directly improve performance, but they do increase
 it's capabilities.  More specifically, they allow the computer to do
 MORE tasks better, instead of focusing on speeding up tasks.  That's
 not a bad thing really, because it's nice to be able to do multiple
 things simultaneously, like burning a cd while listening to mp3s and
 playing games on a LAMP server that's running emerge -u world without
 any degradation in performance in any of the processes.

People who do that scare me.

 That kind of performance seems to be what is intended with these
 different avenues that the chip makers are taking.  That is not to say
 that single tasks will perform any better, and I think the lack of
 discerning the difference is causing a lot of confusion for most
 people, especially when they aren't familiar with low level
 programming.

In the end this might degenerate to a programmer's rating thing. 
IE: one standardised benchmark.

 On 3/29/06, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  On 3/29/06, Lord Sauron [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   www.alienware.com  I beg to differ.  I could have sworn I saw a laptop
   with more than 2G...  where was it... wow!  You appear to be right!
   Darn.. I could have SWORN I saw something with  2G...
 
  Actually, you are right.  I neglected the monstrous Clevo laptop.  Its
  an AMD X2 with capacity for 2 optical drives plus 2 hard drives, up to
  3G of memory, and a 200W power adapter.  Weighs 12-15 lbs, _not_
  counting the power adapter!  This is acutally a Clevo design, sold by
  Sager, AGearnotebooks, and many others.  Alienware got it with a
  customized case.  All of the reviews I read on it basically said
  incredible performance, excellent display, but heavy, noisy, and
  really hard to describe how large it really is.
 
  I was actually considering purchasing this beast...but the noise
  factor scared me off.  Not really appropriate for a shared office or
  conference room.
 
   compiler helps with the 64-bit part.  It gets a bit technical, but
   there is a big difference between something made from the ground up as
   64-bit versus something that was made 32-bit and just recompiled
   64-bit.
 
  For most applications, this is not true.  The vast majority of C/C++
  code that runs on a desktop system couldn't care less whether longs
  and pointers are 32-bits or 64-bits in size.  It is a compiler
  

Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-30 Thread Matthias Bethke
Hi Lord,
on Wednesday, 2006-03-29 at 17:41:49, you wrote:
 However, at the same time, you really shouldn't expect games out of
 any but the most expensive laptops.

You know, games includes stuff released before January 2006 =^
The 486/100 laptop I bought for EUR 150 some 8 years ago runs Zork just
fine. In C64 emulation if you like. And although I wouldn't want to try
them all I bet my Mobile Athlon XP 1600+ with its crappy shared memory
SiS gfx would run most things in portage/games-* just fine.

SCNR :)
Matthias
-- 
I prefer encrypted and signed messages. KeyID: FAC37665
Fingerprint: 8C16 3F0A A6FC DF0D 19B0  8DEF 48D9 1700 FAC3 7665


pgp0XA1su14XW.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-30 Thread Mike Myers
Just my .02c, but it seems like the 64-bit processors come with more
hype than benefits.  Not that the 64-bit move is a bad thing at all,
but I mean it just seems like people tend to expect much more out of
them than what they should.

It would seem like a more accurate, but oversimplified explaination
would be that it simply allows for other improvements within the
computer, but it does not improve anything on it's own.  For instance,
allowing 4GB ram, which in turn gives better performance.  From what
I've read, there are improvements in certain things that are specific
to number crunching, like a database with mathematical formulas. 
However, for a desktop processor, the difference is going to be barely
noticeable, if any, especially since most desktops don't use more than
4 gigs of ram.

It definitely seems to be a difficult thing to explain though due to
the nature of the processor.  Most people think simply 'more numbers =
more speed', but that's not really case, and surely not the point. 
Since around the mid 90's, processor speeds have steadily increased,
but in the last couple of years, that increase has halted. 
Supposedly, the speeds have been maxed out for the size of the
processors, so that's why the manufacturers are trying different
routes, like hyperthreading, dual core, multi-core, and 64-bit.  None
of these features directly improve performance, but they do increase
it's capabilities.  More specifically, they allow the computer to do
MORE tasks better, instead of focusing on speeding up tasks.  That's
not a bad thing really, because it's nice to be able to do multiple
things simultaneously, like burning a cd while listening to mp3s and
playing games on a LAMP server that's running emerge -u world without
any degradation in performance in any of the processes.

That kind of performance seems to be what is intended with these
different avenues that the chip makers are taking.  That is not to say
that single tasks will perform any better, and I think the lack of
discerning the difference is causing a lot of confusion for most
people, especially when they aren't familiar with low level
programming.

On 3/29/06, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On 3/29/06, Lord Sauron [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  www.alienware.com  I beg to differ.  I could have sworn I saw a laptop
  with more than 2G...  where was it... wow!  You appear to be right!
  Darn.. I could have SWORN I saw something with  2G...

 Actually, you are right.  I neglected the monstrous Clevo laptop.  Its
 an AMD X2 with capacity for 2 optical drives plus 2 hard drives, up to
 3G of memory, and a 200W power adapter.  Weighs 12-15 lbs, _not_
 counting the power adapter!  This is acutally a Clevo design, sold by
 Sager, AGearnotebooks, and many others.  Alienware got it with a
 customized case.  All of the reviews I read on it basically said
 incredible performance, excellent display, but heavy, noisy, and
 really hard to describe how large it really is.

 I was actually considering purchasing this beast...but the noise
 factor scared me off.  Not really appropriate for a shared office or
 conference room.

  compiler helps with the 64-bit part.  It gets a bit technical, but
  there is a big difference between something made from the ground up as
  64-bit versus something that was made 32-bit and just recompiled
  64-bit.

 For most applications, this is not true.  The vast majority of C/C++
 code that runs on a desktop system couldn't care less whether longs
 and pointers are 32-bits or 64-bits in size.  It is a compiler
 function to deal with that.  And it is also a compiler function to
 determine whether 64-bit or 32-bit registers should be used for a
 particular operation.  FYI, gcc has supported non-x86 64-bit CPUs for
 a long time, so gcc's 64-bit support is probably more mature than you
 think.  So are the applications...many open source applications were
 ported and adapted (if necessary) to 64-bit sparc and alpha processors
 back in the late 90s.

 There are opportunities for some programs to take advantage of special
 processor operations through assembly instructions.  This is very
 similar to how 3Dnow, MMX, SSE, et. al. make programs faster.  So
 there may be some specific optimizations for some operations that can
 be improved over time.

 An example of an application domain that could benefit from 64-bit is
 encryption, because for key setups you need to calculate very large
 numbers.  Such numbers could be calculated about twice as fast with
 64-bit operations vs 32-bit.  *BUT*, this does almost nothing for the
 actual data encryption itself.

 A good resource on the 64-bit vs 32-bit issues is to look at AMDs
 optimization guide for software developers.  Chapter 3 is particularly
 relevant:

 http://www.amd.com/us-en/assets/content_type/white_papers_and_tech_docs/25112.PDF

 -Richard

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--
Mike Myers
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.yaay.us

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[OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Richard Fish
On 3/29/06, Ow Mun Heng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Hmm.. seems to me, you do like your laptops big and heavy and bulky. :-)
 IIRC, you had a P4 chip in your last laptop? (was that you?)

Yep, except that 'luggable' incurred severe lid cracking last summer
and I had to replace it.  So I purchased a 2.1Ghz P-M 6lb notebook to
use for about 6 months until the first Core Duo came available.  That
was a nice notebook, even with a 15.4 screen, I found it to be very
portable.

This is my first notebook with a 17 screen, which I really do
like...except when I have to carry it! That's why I call it a
'luggable'. ;-

-Richard

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Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Lord Sauron
On 3/29/06, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On 3/29/06, Ow Mun Heng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Hmm.. seems to me, you do like your laptops big and heavy and bulky. :-)
  IIRC, you had a P4 chip in your last laptop? (was that you?)

 Yep, except that 'luggable' incurred severe lid cracking last summer
 and I had to replace it.  So I purchased a 2.1Ghz P-M 6lb notebook to
 use for about 6 months until the first Core Duo came available.  That
 was a nice notebook, even with a 15.4 screen, I found it to be very
 portable.

You have no idea what portable is.  One month on a 3.7lb. 12.1 inch
X40 and you'll never go back - even if you wanted to!

 This is my first notebook with a 17 screen, which I really do
 like...except when I have to carry it! That's why I call it a
 'luggable'. ;-

Just a word of the wise from many experienced laptop users:

If you want to take it with you, less than 5 pounds is a requirement. 
You may say you're strong, and I believe you.  However, even the
world's strongest man would still have to admit that 13 pounds isn't a
good idea.

Plus, think of it this way:

There are exceptions to the road-warrior lighter-is-better rule, of
course, but not many.  If you *need* the power, why not just
SSH/RDesktop into a bigger, much more expensive desktop and leave your
poor laptop battery alone?  That's what I do.  I have the tiny IBM
X40: not very fast.  But then check out my desktop rig: AMD Athlon64
3000+ 2.0GHz Socket 754 1.0GHz FSB w/Hypertransport, 512Megs of RAM,
10,000RPM WD SATA150 Raptor (76GB, I'm not rich enough for the new
150GB) and a killer nVidia GeForce 6800 AGP 8x w/512MB of GDDR2 video
RAM (embedded OpenGL 1.5/DirectX9 processing).

It's my baby - I raised it from just a little Athon K6 900MHz!  I
built it myself out of a hulking abandoned server case.  When I get
home, do I crunch numbers on the X40?  No.  I use it for what it's
good for: email, office work, y'know, editing stuff.  Compile on the
big machine and you're home free.

--
== GCv3.12 ==
GCS d-(++) s+: a? C++ UL+ P+
L++ E--- W+(+++) N++ o? K? w--- O? M+
V? PS- PE+ Y-(--) PGP- t+++ 5? X R tv-- b+
DI+++ D+ G e* h- !r !y
= END GCv3.12 

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Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Lord Sauron
http://www-131.ibm.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?productId=4611686018425155337storeId=1001langId=-1categoryId=2059153dualCurrId=173catalogId=-840

That's the cheapest X60 with Core Duo.  HOWEVER:

I'd still highly recommend a AMD Turion.  Well...  I'd even more
strongly suggest just waiting, all you prospective laptop buyers.  A
Dual Core Turion64 is coming *very* soon.  The Turion64s murdered the
Pentium M processors in not just speed but power efficiency.  My
Athlon1400 could kill a Pentium 4 2.4GHz any time.  My Athlon64 can
destroy the fastest non-dual core Pentium 4 (extreme editions exempted
- I don't know anyone with one to compare the performance with).  Acer
makes good laptops with AMD chips.

Just for laughs, Intel just released a new Pentium4 Ext.Ed. (Dual
core, 955) to counter the FX-60 from AMD.  PC World tested the chip...
 the FX-60 was ~30% faster while being about $30 cheaper.

Okay, I'll stop evangelising AMD now.  Thanks for listening (it makes
me feel somewhat important).

On 3/29/06, Lord Sauron [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On 3/29/06, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  On 3/29/06, Ow Mun Heng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   Hmm.. seems to me, you do like your laptops big and heavy and bulky. :-)
   IIRC, you had a P4 chip in your last laptop? (was that you?)
 
  Yep, except that 'luggable' incurred severe lid cracking last summer
  and I had to replace it.  So I purchased a 2.1Ghz P-M 6lb notebook to
  use for about 6 months until the first Core Duo came available.  That
  was a nice notebook, even with a 15.4 screen, I found it to be very
  portable.

 You have no idea what portable is.  One month on a 3.7lb. 12.1 inch
 X40 and you'll never go back - even if you wanted to!

  This is my first notebook with a 17 screen, which I really do
  like...except when I have to carry it! That's why I call it a
  'luggable'. ;-

 Just a word of the wise from many experienced laptop users:

 If you want to take it with you, less than 5 pounds is a requirement.
 You may say you're strong, and I believe you.  However, even the
 world's strongest man would still have to admit that 13 pounds isn't a
 good idea.

 Plus, think of it this way:

 There are exceptions to the road-warrior lighter-is-better rule, of
 course, but not many.  If you *need* the power, why not just
 SSH/RDesktop into a bigger, much more expensive desktop and leave your
 poor laptop battery alone?  That's what I do.  I have the tiny IBM
 X40: not very fast.  But then check out my desktop rig: AMD Athlon64
 3000+ 2.0GHz Socket 754 1.0GHz FSB w/Hypertransport, 512Megs of RAM,
 10,000RPM WD SATA150 Raptor (76GB, I'm not rich enough for the new
 150GB) and a killer nVidia GeForce 6800 AGP 8x w/512MB of GDDR2 video
 RAM (embedded OpenGL 1.5/DirectX9 processing).

 It's my baby - I raised it from just a little Athon K6 900MHz!  I
 built it myself out of a hulking abandoned server case.  When I get
 home, do I crunch numbers on the X40?  No.  I use it for what it's
 good for: email, office work, y'know, editing stuff.  Compile on the
 big machine and you're home free.

 --
 == GCv3.12 ==
 GCS d-(++) s+: a? C++ UL+ P+
 L++ E--- W+(+++) N++ o? K? w--- O? M+
 V? PS- PE+ Y-(--) PGP- t+++ 5? X R tv-- b+
 DI+++ D+ G e* h- !r !y
 = END GCv3.12 



--
== GCv3.12 ==
GCS d-(++) s+: a? C++ UL+ P+
L++ E--- W+(+++) N++ o? K? w--- O? M+
V? PS- PE+ Y-(--) PGP- t+++ 5? X R tv-- b+
DI+++ D+ G e* h- !r !y
= END GCv3.12 

-- 
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Richard Fish
On 3/29/06, Lord Sauron [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 You have no idea what portable is.  One month on a 3.7lb. 12.1 inch
 X40 and you'll never go back - even if you wanted to!

Well, everybody has different needs/tastes.  Frankly, I wouldn't even
want to _touch_ something with a 12.1in screen.  ;-

Portability is not my primary concern.  Nor is battery life.  Reading
and responding to email on the road is not something I need to do
frequently, or when I do, I can wait until I get to the hotel or the
conference room.  I have never even had a desire to pull out a laptop
on a plane...heck, I don't even bother with an ipod or pda usually.

My big issue is screen resolution; I need a very high resolution
screen for viewing technical schematics with good scope and readable
fonts.  I was working with a visitor recently who constantly had me
print out schematics because he could not read them on his laptop or
the available desktop without zooming in so far that he couldn't see
the overall diagram.  On my 17 screen at 1920x1200 though, neither of
us had any problems with the display.

The _minimum_ I can work with is about 1400x1050 (1680x1050 in a wide format).

 Just a word of the wise from many experienced laptop users:

Does using a laptop for 12-14 hours/day every day for the last 3 years
count as 'experienced'? ;-  Including international travel?

 world's strongest man would still have to admit that 13 pounds isn't a
 good idea.

No argument there...9lb + case + power supply is more than most people
would want or need to deal with.  But there is no sub-5lb laptop
available today that can meet my display needs.

-Richard

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Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Mike Myers
Are you sure that it was a Pentium M and not a Pentium4-M or just the 
p4s?  There is a signicant difference.  With all the benchmarks I've 
seen, the Pentium Ms beat all the other processors in terms of power 
consumption and heat and in a lot of cases, performance.  it even 
outdoes the P4s and the FX series amds.  Tomshardware even has 
benchmarks claiming such a thing (which is odd since they're usually 
anti-intel).  It is after all, a souped up P3 which allows it to have a 
faster clock speed than the p4s even when running with fewer ghz.


Lord Sauron wrote:


http://www-131.ibm.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?productId=4611686018425155337storeId=1001langId=-1categoryId=2059153dualCurrId=173catalogId=-840

That's the cheapest X60 with Core Duo.  HOWEVER:

I'd still highly recommend a AMD Turion.  Well...  I'd even more
strongly suggest just waiting, all you prospective laptop buyers.  A
Dual Core Turion64 is coming *very* soon.  The Turion64s murdered the
Pentium M processors in not just speed but power efficiency.  My
Athlon1400 could kill a Pentium 4 2.4GHz any time.  My Athlon64 can
destroy the fastest non-dual core Pentium 4 (extreme editions exempted
- I don't know anyone with one to compare the performance with).  Acer
makes good laptops with AMD chips.

Just for laughs, Intel just released a new Pentium4 Ext.Ed. (Dual
core, 955) to counter the FX-60 from AMD.  PC World tested the chip...
the FX-60 was ~30% faster while being about $30 cheaper.

Okay, I'll stop evangelising AMD now.  Thanks for listening (it makes
me feel somewhat important).

 



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Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread michael

Always interesting discussions on this list.

I have two questions for everyone (not just the person I'm responding
to):

How soon do you think we'll see laptops with the Dual Core Turion64?

Elsewhere (perhaps on this list on a different topic) someone
recommended not buying anything except for 64 bits (either AMD or Intel)
from now on. Do you agree, in particular regarding laptops?

M


On Wed, 29 Mar 2006, Mike Myers wrote:

Are you sure that it was a Pentium M and not a Pentium4-M or just the p4s? 
There is a signicant difference.  With all the benchmarks I've seen, the 
Pentium Ms beat all the other processors in terms of power consumption and 
heat and in a lot of cases, performance.  it even outdoes the P4s and the FX 
series amds.  Tomshardware even has benchmarks claiming such a thing (which 
is odd since they're usually anti-intel).  It is after all, a souped up P3 
which allows it to have a faster clock speed than the p4s even when running 
with fewer ghz.


Lord Sauron wrote:


http://www-131.ibm.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?productId=4611686018425155337storeId=1001langId=-1categoryId=2059153dualCurrId=173catalogId=-840

That's the cheapest X60 with Core Duo.  HOWEVER:

I'd still highly recommend a AMD Turion.  Well...  I'd even more
strongly suggest just waiting, all you prospective laptop buyers.  A
Dual Core Turion64 is coming *very* soon.  The Turion64s murdered the
Pentium M processors in not just speed but power efficiency.  My
Athlon1400 could kill a Pentium 4 2.4GHz any time.  My Athlon64 can
destroy the fastest non-dual core Pentium 4 (extreme editions exempted
- I don't know anyone with one to compare the performance with).  Acer
makes good laptops with AMD chips.

Just for laughs, Intel just released a new Pentium4 Ext.Ed. (Dual
core, 955) to counter the FX-60 from AMD.  PC World tested the chip...
 the FX-60 was ~30% faster while being about $30 cheaper.

Okay, I'll stop evangelising AMD now.  Thanks for listening (it makes
me feel somewhat important).





--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



--
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Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Lord Sauron
On 3/29/06, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On 3/29/06, Lord Sauron [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  You have no idea what portable is.  One month on a 3.7lb. 12.1 inch
  X40 and you'll never go back - even if you wanted to!

 Well, everybody has different needs/tastes.  Frankly, I wouldn't even
 want to _touch_ something with a 12.1in screen.  ;-

That's just you - and as I said, there are a few exceptions.  However,
for most users, 17 isn't necessary, wouldn't you agree?

 Portability is not my primary concern.  Nor is battery life.  Reading
 and responding to email on the road is not something I need to do
 frequently, or when I do, I can wait until I get to the hotel or the
 conference room.  I have never even had a desire to pull out a laptop
 on a plane...heck, I don't even bother with an ipod or pda usually.

Yeah, however, I see all these people buy a cheap laptop from Dell and
expect it to run stuff like Doom 3.  They end up hating their laptop
because it's slow, heavy, and by running D3 they kiss whatever was
left of their poor battery goodbye.

 My big issue is screen resolution; I need a very high resolution
 screen for viewing technical schematics with good scope and readable
 fonts.  I was working with a visitor recently who constantly had me
 print out schematics because he could not read them on his laptop or
 the available desktop without zooming in so far that he couldn't see
 the overall diagram.  On my 17 screen at 1920x1200 though, neither of
 us had any problems with the display.

That's you and what you do.  A guy who does finances at Safeway corp.
hq doesn't need the equivalent of Bill Gate's mansion in screen real
estate.  You do.

 The _minimum_ I can work with is about 1400x1050 (1680x1050 in a wide format).

Great for you.  However, if you got a laptop for non-work use
(personal, communications, mobile DVD viewing, c) would you rather
get the massive 9 pound thing you use at work, or a nice small 14
portable?

When you get the 17, you're buying for necessity.  Go smaller if you
can afford it.  You can't ATM.  There's nothing wrong with that.

  Just a word of the wise from many experienced laptop users:

 Does using a laptop for 12-14 hours/day every day for the last 3 years
 count as 'experienced'? ;-  Including international travel?

Yeah, experienced in your area of expertise and how it relates to
laptop buying decisions.  Different people have different patterns of
mobile use.  ~90% of the people I know need to use their laptop on the
go.  They're the people my advice is aimed at.

  world's strongest man would still have to admit that 13 pounds isn't a
  good idea.

 No argument there...9lb + case + power supply is more than most people
 would want or need to deal with.  But there is no sub-5lb laptop
 available today that can meet my display needs.

Yeah...  Lenovo, to give them credit, came really close.  15.1 in
their Z60t at only 4lbs.

Before I forget: I lied.  I doublechecked the #s and my X40 is really
2.7 lbs.  Srry...  won't let it happen again ; )

--
== GCv3.12 ==
GCS d-(++) s+: a? C++ UL+ P+
L++ E--- W+(+++) N++ o? K? w--- O? M+
V? PS- PE+ Y-(--) PGP- t+++ 5? X R tv-- b+
DI+++ D+ G e* h- !r !y
= END GCv3.12 

-- 
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Lord Sauron
On 3/29/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Always interesting discussions on this list.

 I have two questions for everyone (not just the person I'm responding
 to):

 How soon do you think we'll see laptops with the Dual Core Turion64?

AMD says the release will be within 4 months or so.  I'd expect it
within 5-6 months, to see them in enough places to really call them
avaliable.

 Elsewhere (perhaps on this list on a different topic) someone
 recommended not buying anything except for 64 bits (either AMD or Intel)
 from now on. Do you agree, in particular regarding laptops?

Not entirely.  Having a 64-bit machine does give some major bonuses. 
Reliable sources (guys I know who do a lot of benchmarking) tell me
that a 64-bit chip will perform ~10% faster than a non-64-bit chip. 
However, 64-bit chips in laptops aren't that common yet.

If you're like me, you'll buy a 32-bit laptop just because it's
cheaper.  However, if you do stuff that would make a 64-bit chip
necessary (MatLab, for instance, runs *much* faster in a 64-bit
enviornent) then by all means shell out the extra money and get it.  I
evangalise the greatness of AMD64 technology a lot, but I will NOT
tell you to waste your money.  If you don't need the speed, DON'T BUY
IT!  Free enterprise is based on the idea that consumers will buy the
best product or the product they need.  Buy what you need.  If you
need a 17 screen, buy it.  If you (like me) can't live without
ultra-portability, buy it.  If you can't live without either...  flip
a coin : )

--
== GCv3.12 ==
GCS d-(++) s+: a? C++ UL+ P+
L++ E--- W+(+++) N++ o? K? w--- O? M+
V? PS- PE+ Y-(--) PGP- t+++ 5? X R tv-- b+
DI+++ D+ G e* h- !r !y
= END GCv3.12 

-- 
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Lord Sauron
On 3/29/06, Mike Myers [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Are you sure that it was a Pentium M and not a Pentium4-M or just the

It's ID is a Pentium-M Ultra-Low Voltage 1.0GHz Processor.  It's
basically whatever you'll find in the IBM X40 type 2386-1CU.  My
serial # is KV-AC277.  Proud owner of a IBM.  It's built like a rock -
I love it.  It's survived my backpack.  Isn't that amazing?  It's the
first device in recorded history to do that!

 p4s?  There is a signicant difference.  With all the benchmarks I've
 seen, the Pentium Ms beat all the other processors in terms of power
 consumption and heat and in a lot of cases, performance.  it even
 outdoes the P4s and the FX series amds.  Tomshardware even has

Turions are really good, though I'm not totally certain of the
veracity of the testers.  Things also vary from test to test, so it's
totally possible that what I have now is cooler and less-power-hungry
than a Turion.  However, start comparing the ratio of heat to speed
and power to speed, and the Turion slaughters the Pentium Ms.

 benchmarks claiming such a thing (which is odd since they're usually
 anti-intel).  It is after all, a souped up P3 which allows it to have a
 faster clock speed than the p4s even when running with fewer ghz.

I have one.  They suck for doing number crunching.  I have an
Athlon64.  It kicks total butt.  The Turion64 is really just a scaled
down Athlon64.  The new Turion64 X2s are just scaled down Athlon64
X2s.  AMD just takes a bit longer to make their dual-core stuff
because they load it up with all kinds of goodies that make it go
faster without clocking it up.
--
== GCv3.12 ==
GCS d-(++) s+: a? C++ UL+ P+
L++ E--- W+(+++) N++ o? K? w--- O? M+
V? PS- PE+ Y-(--) PGP- t+++ 5? X R tv-- b+
DI+++ D+ G e* h- !r !y
= END GCv3.12 

-- 
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Richard Fish
On 3/29/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 How soon do you think we'll see laptops with the Dual Core Turion64?

Summer.  Got to have them out in time for back-to-school purchasing, right?


 Elsewhere (perhaps on this list on a different topic) someone
 recommended not buying anything except for 64 bits (either AMD or Intel)
 from now on. Do you agree, in particular regarding laptops?

No, but others are going to disagree with me!

Nobody is currently producing laptops that can have over 4G of memory
(in fact, 2G is the max today in a laptop).  And for my AMD desktop at
home, I don't see much difference between 64 and 32-bit programs.  The
programs I am most interested in running fast are compression,
encryption, media encoding, and the like...standard desktop type uses.
 Some things are slightly faster in 32-bit, some things are slightly
faster in 64-bit, but neither mode seems to have a definitive
advantage.

So unless and until you require more memory or specific applications,
I don't think you need to worry about 64-bit.

-Richard

-- 
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Lord Sauron
On 3/29/06, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On 3/29/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  How soon do you think we'll see laptops with the Dual Core Turion64?

 Summer.  Got to have them out in time for back-to-school purchasing, right?

 
  Elsewhere (perhaps on this list on a different topic) someone
  recommended not buying anything except for 64 bits (either AMD or Intel)
  from now on. Do you agree, in particular regarding laptops?

 No, but others are going to disagree with me!

 Nobody is currently producing laptops that can have over 4G of memory
 (in fact, 2G is the max today in a laptop).  And for my AMD desktop at

www.alienware.com  I beg to differ.  I could have sworn I saw a laptop
with more than 2G...  where was it... wow!  You appear to be right! 
Darn.. I could have SWORN I saw something with  2G...

 home, I don't see much difference between 64 and 32-bit programs.  The
 programs I am most interested in running fast are compression,
 encryption, media encoding, and the like...standard desktop type uses.

There is a big difference.  You most likely aren't running with
software compiled for 64-bit, or software that wasn't designed to take
advantage of 64-bit, rather targeting 32-bit and just praying the
compiler helps with the 64-bit part.  It gets a bit technical, but
there is a big difference between something made from the ground up as
64-bit versus something that was made 32-bit and just recompiled
64-bit.

  Some things are slightly faster in 32-bit, some things are slightly
 faster in 64-bit, but neither mode seems to have a definitive
 advantage.

Yes, with the unfairness of the compiler, that is true.  It's a lot
like if you had a car that could go 200MPH.  Your driver may only hit
80MPH (the 32-bit code on a 64-bit chip), but then you get a driver
trained for 200MPH driving, and then he actually hits 200MPH (the
64-bit code).

It's like the good data in good data out / bad data in bad data out theory.

 So unless and until you require more memory or specific applications,
 I don't think you need to worry about 64-bit.

Well, I think we must include bragging rights into our deliberation. 
That's a major part of it, too.  Even though some people may never use
more than a whole MHz of their PC, they still like to brag ; )

PS: I'm not one of them.  If there were a law against computer abuse,
I'd be locked up for life - It pains me to see a CPU idling.

 -Richard

 --
 gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list




--
== GCv3.12 ==
GCS d-(++) s+: a? C++ UL+ P+
L++ E--- W+(+++) N++ o? K? w--- O? M+
V? PS- PE+ Y-(--) PGP- t+++ 5? X R tv-- b+
DI+++ D+ G e* h- !r !y
= END GCv3.12 

-- 
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Richard Fish
On 3/29/06, Lord Sauron [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Great for you.  However, if you got a laptop for non-work use
 (personal, communications, mobile DVD viewing, c) would you rather
 get the massive 9 pound thing you use at work, or a nice small 14
 portable?

Even this is a tough decision for me...I do occasionally like to watch
DVDs on my laptop, even when I am at home, because at arms length my
screen takes up more of my visual field than my 65 TV across the
room!  There is just something about that that makes me smile...

Probably the same smile you get after you panic because you think you
forgot your laptop,  and then realize it is on your shoulder...

 Before I forget: I lied.  I doublechecked the #s and my X40 is really
 2.7 lbs.  Srry...  won't let it happen again ; )

Thank goodness for competition and market analysiswe both get
laptops that we are really happy with, and that work well for us!

Anyway my advice to people is to figure out what your needs are and
buy the best laptop you can afford that comes as close to those needs
as possible.  Bigger is not always better.  Neither is smaller.

-Richard

-- 
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Lord Sauron
On 3/29/06, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On 3/29/06, Lord Sauron [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Great for you.  However, if you got a laptop for non-work use
  (personal, communications, mobile DVD viewing, c) would you rather
  get the massive 9 pound thing you use at work, or a nice small 14
  portable?

 Even this is a tough decision for me...I do occasionally like to watch
 DVDs on my laptop, even when I am at home, because at arms length my
 screen takes up more of my visual field than my 65 TV across the
 room!  There is just something about that that makes me smile...

Yeah, even with my amazing 12.1 Theatre-in-a-clamshell display it
takes up more of my field of view than anything other than my dad's
massive 51 DLP HDTV (1080i, I hope to plug my hilariously overpowered
graphics card into it someday!)

 Probably the same smile you get after you panic because you think you
 forgot your laptop,  and then realize it is on your shoulder...

Yup!  What really puts it into perspective is the X4 Ultrabase dock
that I use.  When I take it with me (when I know I'll need it -
otherwise it sits next to the Athlon64) I can really feel the extra
1.1lbs.  It's more noticeable than you would think, for those of you
who never owned a laptop.

  Before I forget: I lied.  I doublechecked the #s and my X40 is really
  2.7 lbs.  Srry...  won't let it happen again ; )

 Thank goodness for competition and market analysiswe both get
 laptops that we are really happy with, and that work well for us!

Yup.  Thank God for lassiz-faire, or you we would both have laptops
(if we were lucky) that would be the best for us - according to what
the state says is the best for us : (

 Anyway my advice to people is to figure out what your needs are and
 buy the best laptop you can afford that comes as close to those needs
 as possible.  Bigger is not always better.  Neither is smaller.

I love consulting on these things.  Just email me - I'm totally
neurotic about making sure you find what you need and not what they
say you need (which also just so happens to be the most expensive item
on their list...  what are the chances of that?)

--
== GCv3.12 ==
GCS d-(++) s+: a? C++ UL+ P+
L++ E--- W+(+++) N++ o? K? w--- O? M+
V? PS- PE+ Y-(--) PGP- t+++ 5? X R tv-- b+
DI+++ D+ G e* h- !r !y
= END GCv3.12 

-- 
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Ow Mun Heng
On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 11:36 -0800, Lord Sauron wrote:
 On 3/29/06, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 You have no idea what portable is.  One month on a 3.7lb. 12.1 inch
 X40 and you'll never go back - even if you wanted to!

It depends actually. Like Richard, I like/love the high res on my D600 -
1400x1050. 

I can live with a 12.1 1024x768, but I don't think I can live with
those new Glare LCDs which are so popular today.

But between ultraportable and having a high res screen, I _will_ go back
to a 12.1 cos of the weight. 

I used to have a Dell P166 MMX which weighed 3.2 Kgs before I bought
this 'so-called' 2.2kg D600. Now, I know that even 2.2 is heavy.

I'm a so-called road-warrior. I take my laptop nearly everywhere. (since
I don't like leaving it in the car for fear of it getting stolen. There
are reports of thieves using some kind of metal/battery detector, going
around parking lots and unlocking the trunk! 2 Colleagues lost theirs
that way.)



-- 
Ow Mun Heng
Gentoo/Linux on DELL D600 1.4Ghz 1.5GB RAM
98% Microsoft(tm) Free!! 
Neuromancer 09:04:11 up 1 day, 1:42, 4 users, load average: 0.38, 0.78,
2.16 


-- 
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Ow Mun Heng
On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 11:47 -0800, Lord Sauron wrote:
 http://www-131.ibm.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?productId=4611686018425155337storeId=1001langId=-1categoryId=2059153dualCurrId=173catalogId=-840
 
 That's the cheapest X60 with Core Duo.  HOWEVER:

Hmm.. you obviously missed out this one..
http://shoponline.com.sg/product_info.php?osCsid=846a9e26b170bb790f1abf4c95c68030currency=USDosCsid=846a9e26b170bb790f1abf4c95c68030cPath=116products_id=3728

though it's just a tad bit more pricer, but way better processor specs.

I'm thinking of getting it actually. (for the whom must be obeyed)

-- 
Ow Mun Heng
Gentoo/Linux on DELL D600 1.4Ghz 1.5GB RAM
98% Microsoft(tm) Free!! 
Neuromancer 09:08:55 up 1 day, 1:47, 4 users, load average: 0.77, 0.69,
1.73 


-- 
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Ow Mun Heng
On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 13:35 -0700, Richard Fish wrote:
 /me goes to get 3rd mortgage to pay for more gadgets...
 
/me surprised that 'whom must be obeyed' actually OK'ed the idea. Hehe..

/me have to go work out a budget report and write up a 200page brief for
getting funds from the Ministry of Home Finance.



-- 
Ow Mun Heng
Gentoo/Linux on DELL D600 1.4Ghz 1.5GB RAM
98% Microsoft(tm) Free!! 
Neuromancer 09:09:41 up 1 day, 1:48, 4 users, load average: 0.85, 0.71,
1.69 


-- 
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Ow Mun Heng
On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 17:34 -0700, Richard Fish wrote:
 On 3/29/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  How soon do you think we'll see laptops with the Dual Core Turion64?
 
 Summer.  Got to have them out in time for back-to-school purchasing, right?
 
 
  Elsewhere (perhaps on this list on a different topic) someone
  recommended not buying anything except for 64 bits (either AMD or Intel)
  from now on. Do you agree, in particular regarding laptops?
 
 No, but others are going to disagree with me!

Actually, if I didn't have to get one now, I would wait. I'll not wait
for the dual-core AMD, but I'll wait for the quad-core. After all, these
dual-cores are just a transition time for the chip producers. 

Intel just announced that they'll be coming out with the quad cores
sometime in Q1 2007 (can't remember which Q it was..)

 
 Nobody is currently producing laptops that can have over 4G of memory
 (in fact, 2G is the max today in a laptop).  

I think I saw some with 3G?



-- 
Ow Mun Heng
Gentoo/Linux on DELL D600 1.4Ghz 1.5GB RAM
98% Microsoft(tm) Free!! 
Neuromancer 09:12:33 up 1 day, 1:50, 4 users, load average: 0.99, 0.80,
1.54 


-- 
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Ow Mun Heng
On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 15:42 -0800, Lord Sauron wrote:
 On 3/29/06, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Yeah, however, I see all these people buy a cheap laptop from Dell and
 expect it to run stuff like Doom 3. 

Soon, they'll have to but it from Alienware which dell just bought
recently. They're pulling the plug on the discrete graphics even on the
inspiron. /me hates those built-in graphics. Makes things slow.
Seriously does make a difference.

  the available desktop without zooming in so far that he couldn't see
  the overall diagram.  On my 17 screen at 1920x1200 though, neither of
  us had any problems with the display.

If you're not concerned with battery nor weight. I suggest you go for
the Dell XPS Mobile concept (when it becomes available)

Now, that is one _*#$*#_ of a laptop.

Here are some shots. (hope I don't get flamed for this. I've resized the
pics to the smallest.


-- 
Ow Mun Heng
Gentoo/Linux on DELL D600 1.4Ghz 1.5GB RAM
98% Microsoft(tm) Free!! 
Neuromancer 09:34:45 up 1 day, 2:13, 4 users, load average: 1.15, 1.29,
1.26 

attachment: dell-xps-m2010-mobile-concept-pc_large.jpg
attachment: Screenshot-2.jpg


Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Lord Sauron
On 3/29/06, Ow Mun Heng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 15:42 -0800, Lord Sauron wrote:
  On 3/29/06, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

  Yeah, however, I see all these people buy a cheap laptop from Dell and
  expect it to run stuff like Doom 3.

 Soon, they'll have to but it from Alienware which dell just bought
 recently. They're pulling the plug on the discrete graphics even on the
 inspiron. /me hates those built-in graphics. Makes things slow.
 Seriously does make a difference.

However, at the same time, you really shouldn't expect games out of
any but the most expensive laptops.  Maybe 5-10 years from now that'll
be a different story, but for now that's about right.

   the available desktop without zooming in so far that he couldn't see
   the overall diagram.  On my 17 screen at 1920x1200 though, neither of
   us had any problems with the display.

 If you're not concerned with battery nor weight. I suggest you go for
 the Dell XPS Mobile concept (when it becomes available)

 Now, that is one _*#$*#_ of a laptop.

 Here are some shots. (hope I don't get flamed for this. I've resized the
 pics to the smallest.

That's not so much a laptop as a new breed of ultraportable desktop, IMHO.

--
== GCv3.12 ==
GCS d-(++) s+: a? C++ UL+ P+
L++ E--- W+(+++) N++ o? K? w--- O? M+
V? PS- PE+ Y-(--) PGP- t+++ 5? X R tv-- b+
DI+++ D+ G e* h- !r !y
= END GCv3.12 

-- 
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Ow Mun Heng
On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 17:41 -0800, Lord Sauron wrote:
 On 3/29/06, Ow Mun Heng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   Yeah, however, I see all these people buy a cheap laptop from Dell and
   expect it to run stuff like Doom 3.
 
 /me hates those built-in graphics. Makes things slow.
  Seriously does make a difference.
 
 However, at the same time, you really shouldn't expect games out of
 any but the most expensive laptops.  Maybe 5-10 years from now that'll

I'm not even talking about playing games. I'm just talking about graphic
rendering. eg: Desktop Wallpaper rendering/eye candy.

My wife's home desktop is a Dell w/ 768MB Ram, 2,8Ghz P4 and integrated
graphics. It runs slower (feel) than my laptop which has discrete
graphics.


  If you're not concerned with battery nor weight. I suggest you go for
  the Dell XPS Mobile concept (when it becomes available)
  Here are some shots. 
 
 That's not so much a laptop as a new breed of ultraportable desktop, IMHO.

heh.. I like that. Ultraportable desktop.


-- 
Ow Mun Heng
Gentoo/Linux on DELL D600 1.4Ghz 1.5GB RAM
98% Microsoft(tm) Free!! 
Neuromancer 10:24:15 up 1 day, 3:02, 3 users, load average: 0.19, 0.74,
0.95 


-- 
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Lord Sauron
On 3/29/06, Ow Mun Heng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 17:41 -0800, Lord Sauron wrote:
  On 3/29/06, Ow Mun Heng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yeah, however, I see all these people buy a cheap laptop from Dell and
expect it to run stuff like Doom 3.
  
  /me hates those built-in graphics. Makes things slow.
   Seriously does make a difference.
 
  However, at the same time, you really shouldn't expect games out of
  any but the most expensive laptops.  Maybe 5-10 years from now that'll

 I'm not even talking about playing games. I'm just talking about graphic
 rendering. eg: Desktop Wallpaper rendering/eye candy.

Well, I can understand if a lot of eyekandy won't work...  yeah, I
guess you're right.  My laptop's GC works slower than a older GC that
was in a desktop.

 My wife's home desktop is a Dell w/ 768MB Ram, 2,8Ghz P4 and integrated
 graphics. It runs slower (feel) than my laptop which has discrete
 graphics.

Poor woman...  having to use a Dell ; )

   If you're not concerned with battery nor weight. I suggest you go for
   the Dell XPS Mobile concept (when it becomes available)
   Here are some shots.
 
  That's not so much a laptop as a new breed of ultraportable desktop, IMHO.

 heh.. I like that. Ultraportable desktop.

--
== GCv3.12 ==
GCS d-(++) s+: a? C++ UL+ P+
L++ E--- W+(+++) N++ o? K? w--- O? M+
V? PS- PE+ Y-(--) PGP- t+++ 5? X R tv-- b+
DI+++ D+ G e* h- !r !y
= END GCv3.12 

-- 
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Ow Mun Heng
On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 18:53 -0800, Lord Sauron wrote:
 On 3/29/06, Ow Mun Heng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 17:41 -0800, Lord Sauron wrote:
   On 3/29/06, Ow Mun Heng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 
  My wife's home desktop is a Dell w/ 768MB Ram, 2,8Ghz P4 and integrated
  graphics. It runs slower (feel) than my laptop which has discrete
  graphics.
 
 Poor woman...  having to use a Dell ; )

Hey.. I use a DELL too. Dell D600 Laptop. Went through ~6 motherboard
changes. Dang Dell always giving me re-furbished parts.

Hinge Broke off as well. 


-- 
Ow Mun Heng
Gentoo/Linux on DELL D600 1.4Ghz 1.5GB RAM
98% Microsoft(tm) Free!! 
Neuromancer 11:04:30 up 1 day, 3:42, 5 users, load average: 0.18, 0.31,
0.55 


-- 
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Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread John Jolet


On Mar 29, 2006, at 9:04 PM, Ow Mun Heng wrote:


On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 18:53 -0800, Lord Sauron wrote:

On 3/29/06, Ow Mun Heng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 17:41 -0800, Lord Sauron wrote:

On 3/29/06, Ow Mun Heng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:




My wife's home desktop is a Dell w/ 768MB Ram, 2,8Ghz P4 and  
integrated

graphics. It runs slower (feel) than my laptop which has discrete
graphics.


Poor woman...  having to use a Dell ; )


Hey.. I use a DELL too. Dell D600 Laptop. Went through ~6 motherboard
changes. Dang Dell always giving me re-furbished parts.

Hinge Broke off as well.

well, now i've got a perfectly good dell inspiron 1100 running gentoo  
sitting by my ankle as I type on my ibook :)


It's great for network troubleshooting and security testing...but I  
got ahold of it because it was my wife's and the usb ports gradually  
ceased functioningfirst it was the mouse, but the printer  
worked...now not even a usb-powered light will work..

--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [OT] Re: [gentoo-user] Intel Core Duo Processor - Anyone?

2006-03-29 Thread Richard Fish
On 3/29/06, Lord Sauron [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 www.alienware.com  I beg to differ.  I could have sworn I saw a laptop
 with more than 2G...  where was it... wow!  You appear to be right!
 Darn.. I could have SWORN I saw something with  2G...

Actually, you are right.  I neglected the monstrous Clevo laptop.  Its
an AMD X2 with capacity for 2 optical drives plus 2 hard drives, up to
3G of memory, and a 200W power adapter.  Weighs 12-15 lbs, _not_
counting the power adapter!  This is acutally a Clevo design, sold by
Sager, AGearnotebooks, and many others.  Alienware got it with a
customized case.  All of the reviews I read on it basically said
incredible performance, excellent display, but heavy, noisy, and
really hard to describe how large it really is.

I was actually considering purchasing this beast...but the noise
factor scared me off.  Not really appropriate for a shared office or
conference room.

 compiler helps with the 64-bit part.  It gets a bit technical, but
 there is a big difference between something made from the ground up as
 64-bit versus something that was made 32-bit and just recompiled
 64-bit.

For most applications, this is not true.  The vast majority of C/C++
code that runs on a desktop system couldn't care less whether longs
and pointers are 32-bits or 64-bits in size.  It is a compiler
function to deal with that.  And it is also a compiler function to
determine whether 64-bit or 32-bit registers should be used for a
particular operation.  FYI, gcc has supported non-x86 64-bit CPUs for
a long time, so gcc's 64-bit support is probably more mature than you
think.  So are the applications...many open source applications were
ported and adapted (if necessary) to 64-bit sparc and alpha processors
back in the late 90s.

There are opportunities for some programs to take advantage of special
processor operations through assembly instructions.  This is very
similar to how 3Dnow, MMX, SSE, et. al. make programs faster.  So
there may be some specific optimizations for some operations that can
be improved over time.

An example of an application domain that could benefit from 64-bit is
encryption, because for key setups you need to calculate very large
numbers.  Such numbers could be calculated about twice as fast with
64-bit operations vs 32-bit.  *BUT*, this does almost nothing for the
actual data encryption itself.

A good resource on the 64-bit vs 32-bit issues is to look at AMDs
optimization guide for software developers.  Chapter 3 is particularly
relevant:

http://www.amd.com/us-en/assets/content_type/white_papers_and_tech_docs/25112.PDF

-Richard

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