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YouTube - Xubuntu Compiz Fusion VERY OLD computer / Better than Vista

November 22nd, 2007

YouTube - Xubuntu Compiz Fusion VERY OLD computer / Better than Vista

I don’t usually post Youtube links, but this one actually has adults commenting :P Damn kids. Anyway, the topic I want to touch on is old computers. Not old like Atari, old like a Pentium-III 800mhz, which was released in 1999, almost nine years ago.

Nine years is a very long time for computers. Most of them don’t survive that long, thanks to Chinese manufacturing. Cheapness aside, most people replace them a lot sooner than 9 years. I must have gone through six or seven new rigs in that time, but admittedly I’m a freak, and I actually use these things for more than just word processing and email, so I defintely get my money’s worth.

Now back to the Youtube clip: I think it’s awesome that Compiz Fusion runs so smoothly on an older machine, thanks to great programmers making it happen with skillful coding. The problem is, I don’t really care beyond that. It’s kind of like the demo scene, great achievements, nice eye candy, but ultimately it’s just a demonstration of talent. I wouldn’t expect someone still using a P3-800 to care much about wobbly windows and spinning desktop cubes, because they’re clearly utilitarian (or cheap) and don’t need to burden their old workhorse with useless decoration.

Meanwhile, at the opposite end of the spectrum, we have 3ghz dual-core (and quad-core) machines. My video card has more ram than that P3 guy’s whole computer did. If someone were so bored, they could probably write a PC emulator that runs on the graphics card, screw the CPU :) Why is it then, that people commit such great effort and resources into supporting these old cancerous computers ? They work fine with their old software, how about focusing new developments toward recent gear, thus stimulating even more innovation and progress. We’ve got these screaming fast machines, but no one seems to have a clue how to make use of their power. Look at large-scale projects like Folding@Home, their multi-threaded app is still in beta… we’ve had multi-processor machines for over a decade, and every new system sold today has at least 2 cores if not 4, so what’s the hold-up ? There’s a long list of things that would actually benefit the masses today, and Compiz for ten year old machines isn’t on that list.

Don’t give me that speech about the poor people who can’t afford upgrades; the hardware is the cheap thing. The expensive part in any computer is the software, training, tech support, occasional repairs and upgrades. It’s kind of like a car… buy a new car, you don’t have to spend too much on it in the first years. Buy a used car, and you’ll burn a few thousand per year to keep it running, yet you still have an old beat up car. It costs as much (or more) to fix up a 1982 Ford Tempo than it does to maintain my 2001 piece of shit Focus. A computer costs less than a car, but follows the same model: most components have a limited lifetime, like fans, power supplies, hard drives, and if a PC is older than 3-4 years you might spend more to fix it than the system is worth. I sure as hell wouldn’t spend $40 to replace a power supply in a P3-800, unless I happened to have an old spare lying around. I wouldn’t even drive 10 minutes to pick a free one up. I’d sell the remaining parts for a song and build a new rig, or buy a very cheap used one.

I’m not saying people should throw out their old machines, but for the love of Bill, please stop producing software for them!

Fear and loathing in Las Linux

June 4th, 2007

Disclaimer: I’m a prick. No, really! I complain all the time.

Today, I’m going to complain about Linux, A-GAIN! Actually my gripe isn’t so much with the Linux kernel or community, I’m specifically irritated at Redhat, Fedora, CentOS and any other RPM-based distro that relies on “yum” for installing and updating packages… Read the rest of this entry »

Five Tired Old Myths About GNU/Linux, and the whiney hackers that keep them alive

May 25th, 2007

Five Tired Old Myths About GNU/Linux
I’ve been a casual supporter of Linux and free software in general for many years, but I don’t shove it in everyone’s face like a new fad religion. For sake of brevity, here are the 5 “myths” from the article, accompanied by my frank opinion as always… Read the rest of this entry »

Slow web servers, and how to speed them up

May 24th, 2007

In a world where a large portion of internet users are on fast broadband connections, we sometimes come across slow-loading web sites. We’re quick to notice when it takes more than a second or two to load, but what do you do when it’s been over a minute since you clicked the link ?… Read the rest of this entry »

The open-source world as I see it

May 7th, 2007

Hi kids! Did you miss me ?
I experienced a few hours of downtime last night, as a result of some minor tweaking on my server. Actually I just added a 2nd IP address, simple right ? Well how is it that a friggin’ wizard like me, can crash a server with something trivial like adding an IP address ? Red Hat Linux, that’s how… Read the rest of this entry »

Dell and Ubuntu sitting in a tree, k-i-s-s-i-n-g

May 2nd, 2007

Dell, the world’s largest PC manufacturer, finally confirmed the rumours: Ubuntu Linux will be available on new Dell systems as an alternative to Microsoft Windows. Fuck Ballmer! :)… Read the rest of this entry »

Synergy for multi-PC goodness

April 29th, 2007

I’ve been using a neat little utility for the past week called Synergy. It allows one keyboard and mouse to control multiple computers over the network, in an extremely intuitive way. You still need a monitor on the extra computers… Synergy kind of merges all your machines into one huge desktop… Read the rest of this entry »