Antiquated? I've got two computers with these sorts of specs in my house. And I agree with Zhick, this doesn't tell you anything about the desktop responsiveness.
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How An Old Pentium 4 System Runs With Ubuntu 10.04, 10.10
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I seriously think it would be most beneficial for everyone to know what the difference is between Ubuntu 10.X vs Win7 on older hardware. Boot-up times and desktop responsiveness along with common applications loading and usability. I think that's pretty much the extent of what's relevant on older hardware since most people would not use old hardware to game or do performance oriented databasing...
Although it's really interesting to see the regressions in performance! Keep up the good work!
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Originally posted by Zhick View PostAfter reading the title I actually expected an interesting article, that'd tell me about the desktop-performance of such an old machine. Y'know, things like the general responsiveness (snappyness) and memory-consumption (swapping kills desktop-performance).
Well, I guess I should've known better. I should've know it'd only be a bunch of meanigless pts-graphs with pretty much zero value for anyone who's actually interested in how well such an old system fares as simple desktop-system with the latest Ubuntus.
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Yeah - any of those three are probably quite usable.
And configuring a 128MB ramzswap on 10.04 or 10.10's likely to help desktop performance w/512MB ram.
The r9200's a questionable choice (could go with a 9600) and if there's enough HW around the SIS is quite dubious! There are a lot of boxes with i845/i865/i915 integrated graphics in use still, certainly way more than an sis+9200 combo, so it'd be good to see benchmarks with those.
As for the CPU-related benchmarks... the P4 is a *very* odd CPU optimization wise and gcc dev is probably oriented towards the more general K8/K10 and Core 2/i7 cores.
My own use? At SCALE I had a Compaq small-desktop i845 P4/2.66 doing a real time DV->MPEG(-1? I forget ATM) transcode for the main presentation theater (mostly to support the overflow room for keynotes) Ran 70-80% load for both days, no probs.
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Originally posted by misiu_mp View PostIts really disappointing to see the new gallium drivers for old cards degrade in performance in comparison with the old mesa drivers. I have several of those old cards and was hoping to give them a new live sometime.
DRI2 cost 3D performance at first, and the catchup work probably hasn't been done on r100 or r200 yet. And yeah, it might even be running with vsync on...
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Originally posted by ad_267 View PostAntiquated? I've got two computers with these sorts of specs in my house. And I agree with Zhick, this doesn't tell you anything about the desktop responsiveness.
the main reason to get a new box nowadays would be to get a more energy efficient pc offering a similar level of performance as the old box.
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Originally posted by bulletxt View Postmmm.......... quite interesting....
Linux is really evolution. Evolution brings new "things", but loses others. Like humans loosing their tail
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Originally posted by agd5f View PostThe slower 3D performance is likely due to the tearing avoidance code in the dri2 support. A better comparison would be to look at newer distros with kms disabled.
I'd suspect the performance drop would have more to do with redirected rendering.
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