mnzy please tell us which graphics card and which graphics driver does
your system have.
more people should confirm this effect with gnome-settings-daemon. if
that were the case:
I think mnzy comments are quite interesting. we would have that
gnome-settings-daemon is currently a thing that offers a small
aesthetic improvement at the expense of damaging noticeably the
responsiveness of the whole GUI.
I think we should not think about these cases in terms of "is users
fault; their systems are ancient" because this is the windows vista's
approach to computer resources and as we all know, this approach
fails.
Finally, I think gnome-settings-daemon should stop doing (or doing
much faster) 20% of the things that causes 80% of this noticeable
performance drop. (say 20/80, say 10/90 or whatever).
Well, I'm saying all this mainly because I have the same recurring
feeling: few days after ubuntu installations, my excitation about new
features drives away and then I begin to notice that gnome is (still)
too slow, and the more I use it the more I notice it.
On Fri, Mar 27, 2009 at 10:55 PM, mnzy <email address hidden> wrote:
> I gotta add:
> it helps to speed up my whole system.
> For example, maximizing something from the tray like XChat always took a while and now it is up immediately.
> Of course the system looks a bit ugly now. Why is that? What stopped that it looks like this now?
> (Sorry, I'm a beginner at this)
>
> --
> Firefox causes massive Xorg CPU usage
> https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/38131
> You received this bug notification because you are a direct subscriber
> of the bug.
>
>
--
"Make sure that Office documents very well depends on PROPRIETARY IE
capabilities."
Bill Gates, 1998.
mnzy please tell us which graphics card and which graphics driver does
your system have.
more people should confirm this effect with gnome-settings- daemon. if
that were the case:
I think mnzy comments are quite interesting. we would have that daemon is currently a thing that offers a small
gnome-settings-
aesthetic improvement at the expense of damaging noticeably the
responsiveness of the whole GUI.
I think we should not think about these cases in terms of "is users
fault; their systems are ancient" because this is the windows vista's
approach to computer resources and as we all know, this approach
fails.
Finally, I think gnome-settings- daemon should stop doing (or doing
much faster) 20% of the things that causes 80% of this noticeable
performance drop. (say 20/80, say 10/90 or whatever).
Well, I'm saying all this mainly because I have the same recurring
feeling: few days after ubuntu installations, my excitation about new
features drives away and then I begin to notice that gnome is (still)
too slow, and the more I use it the more I notice it.
On Fri, Mar 27, 2009 at 10:55 PM, mnzy <email address hidden> wrote: /bugs.launchpad .net/bugs/ 38131
> I gotta add:
> it helps to speed up my whole system.
> For example, maximizing something from the tray like XChat always took a while and now it is up immediately.
> Of course the system looks a bit ugly now. Why is that? What stopped that it looks like this now?
> (Sorry, I'm a beginner at this)
>
> --
> Firefox causes massive Xorg CPU usage
> https:/
> You received this bug notification because you are a direct subscriber
> of the bug.
>
>
--
"Make sure that Office documents very well depends on PROPRIETARY IE
capabilities."
Bill Gates, 1998.