- when the update manager dialogue box is the selected window, it does not suck a lot of cpu
- but when you select something else (an icon, another window, does not matter), cpu usage of update-manager, compiz and xorg jumps upwards (see screenshot in my last post).
This is reproducible: cpu goes up and down when selecting one or the other.
I found out something interesting right now:
- when the update manager dialogue box is the selected window, it does not suck a lot of cpu
- but when you select something else (an icon, another window, does not matter), cpu usage of update-manager, compiz and xorg jumps upwards (see screenshot in my last post).
This is reproducible: cpu goes up and down when selecting one or the other.