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Intel Core i7 970 Gulftown On Linux

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  • #11
    Originally posted by Michael View Post
    These graphs are screenshots of the SVG files rendered by Gecko.
    Screenshots, that's why. The system you used was using subpixel antialiasing, no doubt. I assume we'll be seeing SVG graphs eventually, so we'll see them rendered with our own display/font settings?

    It's a pet erm, not exactly peeve, but something like that, of mine .. to see screenshots from LCD screens. People always using that ghastly subpixel antialiasing. I don't see how people can think it looks good!

    (Samsung 225BW, 22" 1680x1050 LCD here)

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    • #12
      Well, subpixel hinting was also the first thing i noticed in new
      graphs (which, btw, look just beautiful), and I think it's way better
      than that blurry font rendering on previous graphs. However, there are
      camps... as always. Apparently, it boils down to the way you are
      accustomed to.

      Mac people love it the way previous graph were, which I think is
      hideous. Some Windows folks love it with jagged lines, no antialiasing,
      "put-a-black-pixel-or-go-away" kind of rendering. It's more tolerable,
      but not quite as nice as subpixel hinting.

      And then, there are many kind of subpixel hinting. Original Cleartype
      is crystal clear, but deforming font shapes. New Cleartype (WPF -
      Vista, 7) is blurrier, but significantly better. Ubuntu sub is too
      aggresive (you can sometimes see that on the letter 'k'), in a way
      much like original Cleartype but lousier.

      Finaly, there are my settings Slight hinting, David Turners patch
      (only vertical hinting, like this), non-patented freetype hinter.
      "These are the best settings" - Clavko said. Your mileage can vary

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      • #13
        The problem with these super-expensive processors is that their value isn't that great. Sure it has lots of performance, but you can buy CPUs 3-3,5x cheaper that aren't 3-3,5x slower. Too bad there's no AMD 6-core in there as well.

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        • #14
          Originally posted by devius View Post
          The problem with these super-expensive processors is that their value isn't that great. Sure it has lots of performance, but you can buy CPUs 3-3,5x cheaper that aren't 3-3,5x slower. Too bad there's no AMD 6-core in there as well.
          That's right, I was looking for 6-core AMD CPUs >3GHz in this benchmark, too.

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          • #15
            Originally posted by xeros View Post
            That's right, I was looking for 6-core AMD CPUs >3GHz in this benchmark, too.
            If only AMD sent out such CPUs to me...
            Michael Larabel
            https://www.michaellarabel.com/

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            • #16
              I would take one too for free, but i would never buy it (to compare against i7-880). I also need a H5x board for my second s1156 cpu...

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              • #17
                Wrong word order

                You ought to have written:
                "... to test out this fast but incredibly expensive processor under Linux."

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