Seriously people, if you don't want to understand the problems Canonical is causing to the GNU/Linux environment, i won't waste any more time. I have made my points, and they should be clear to anyone without an agenda...
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Ubuntu Developing Its Own Calculator, Calendar, Etc
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Originally posted by ElderSnake View PostIt begins.
Plenty of open, community governed standards have been complete rubbish... Then someone with actual vision and talent comes along and decides to create standards that don't suck, and all of the old hats whine about how they should've been contributing to the established standards (without handing over leadership, of course). Then the old standard quickly becomes obsolete in favor of the new, better standard, and all that's left is a bunch of trolls whining about what could've been, or how it used to be back in the day....
It's a shame that Red Hat never cared about making Linux for consumers... They instead chose to make Fedora their bleeding-edge, unstable testbed for Red Hat, had they made any attempt to penetrate the "normal people" market, then there might be somebody to balance out Canonical's undeniable leadership today... What a pity...
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Originally posted by TemplarGR View PostSeriously people, if you don't want to understand the problems Canonical is causing to the GNU/Linux environment, i won't waste any more time. I have made my points, and they should be clear to anyone without an agenda...
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I'm looking forward to the all new Ubuntu Even Opener Office!
Seriously, I AM looking forward to these new app designs.
Ubuntu at least has designers whose works exhibit flair (if not always consistency, or good usability practicies).
Of course, I want this to inform Gnome, but I fear that won't happen until a "restructuring" occurs.
I really wish there was a desktop that had a vision similar to mine...
Damn, now I feel like I'M pearl-clutching (I think I've been following the Mir/Wayland spat too closely...BTW, YES, that is how they are to be ordered from now on!).
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Originally posted by liam View PostSeriously, I AM looking forward to these new app designs.
Ubuntu at least has designers whose works exhibit flair (if not always consistency, or good usability practicies).
Of course, I want this to inform Gnome, but I fear that won't happen until a "restructuring" occurs.
I really wish there was a desktop that had a vision similar to mine...
Damn, now I feel like I'M pearl-clutching (I think I've been following the Mir/Wayland spat too closely...BTW, YES, that is how they are to be ordered from now on!).
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Originally posted by BO$$ View PostAnother python fanboi. I understand that you like the language. But it's a pig. It takes 15 seconds to start the damn software center. And the HDD works like crazy. And CPU shoots up in the sky. And memory. God it takes 100 MB of RAM. Stop with the virtual machine bullshit. It's slow and inefficient. Bad language. Bad bad bad. And now they're teaching it everywhere since it's simple....God another generation of shitty programmers who thing it's acceptable to take 50 MB with a damn calculator... Don't even begin to compare it with C++.
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Originally posted by BO$$ View PostAnother python fanboi. I understand that you like the language. But it's a pig. It takes 15 seconds to start the damn software center. And the HDD works like crazy. And CPU shoots up in the sky. And memory. God it takes 100 MB of RAM. Stop with the virtual machine bullshit. It's slow and inefficient. Bad language. Bad bad bad. And now they're teaching it everywhere since it's simple....God another generation of shitty programmers who thing it's acceptable to take 50 MB with a damn calculator... Don't even begin to compare it with C++.
While the software centre is written with Python it uses mostly C libraries to do any of the real work. For example GTK+ is used for the GUI and Xapian for search capabilities.
If you look at the bug: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+s...er/+bug/845579
You will see that Xapian calls are responsible for around 25% of load time (possibly more as this is just for loading the top rated content) Xapian is a highly optimised C library with nothing to do with Python. My theory is that Xapian is possibly being used in an inefficient way but I’m not going to learn how to it works just to fix this for Canonical as once again this project is covered by the CLA.
Most libraries that need speed in Python are actually written in C and just provide a way for Python to hook in. That said I don’t used Python and don’t even like it all that much, it just gets to me when people assume things then spread FUD that other people then take as fact. Do your research first then join the conversation.Last edited by timothyja; 12 March 2013, 09:34 PM.
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