Le mardi 29 septembre 2009 à 19:26 +0200, yannick a écrit :
László Monda a écrit :
I'm disappointed about the current situation.
How about creating an APT repository for Ekiga and its dependencies
for the recent Ubuntu releases?
Done:
On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 8:17 AM, Damien Sandras dsand...@seconix.com wrote:
Le mardi 29 septembre 2009 à 19:26 +0200, yannick a écrit :
László Monda a écrit :
I'm disappointed about the current situation.
How about creating an APT repository for Ekiga and its dependencies
for the recent
Michael Cronenworth wrote:
On 09/27/2009 05:19 AM, Damien Sandras wrote:
Comments ?
How about performance profiling? Ekiga may not be responsible, but on a
good video phone call I will see at least one core at 100% CPU usage on
a brand new Core 2 Duo system. Would it be good to profile
Eugen Dedu a écrit :
Michael Cronenworth wrote:
On 09/27/2009 05:19 AM, Damien Sandras wrote:
Comments ?
How about performance profiling? Ekiga may not be responsible, but on a
good video phone call I will see at least one core at 100% CPU usage on
a brand new Core 2 Duo system. Would
Michael Cronenworth wrote:
How about performance profiling? Ekiga may not be responsible, but on a
good video phone call I will see at least one core at 100% CPU usage on
a brand new Core 2 Duo system. Would it be good to profile the OPAL
and/or ptlib as well as Ekiga to get CPU usage down?
If somebody is interested, I succeed to compile libbost under linux for
win 32 with mingw .
1/ download last version of libboost : boost_1_40_0.tar.gz
2/ uncompress
3/ generate bjam for local platform : sh bootstrap.sh
4/ create a config file for mingw :
*
touch user-config.jam
*
Thierry Simonnet schrieb:
If somebody is interested, I succeed to compile libbost under linux for
win 32 with mingw .
1/ download last version of libboost : boost_1_40_0.tar.gz
2/ uncompress
3/ generate bjam for local platform : sh bootstrap.sh
4/ create a config file for mingw :
*