On 16/10/2015 20:39, Rainer Weikusat wrote:
Neo Futur <d...@ww7.be> writes:
I pretty much stopped reading after the following line in the
composition:
======================================================
Fourthly, I will only be dealing with systemd the service manager (of
which the init is an intracomponent subset, and also contains several
other internal subsystems and characteristics which will prove of
paramount importance to the analysis), and to a lesser extent journald.
======================================================
  Same here, if systemd was just an init system, i d probably still
avoid it and fight it, but the main problem is that its much more than
that, eating everything around it (
http://neofutur.net/local/cache-vignettes/L200xH133/arton19-b28db.gif
), and that is the main problem, for sure.

In case you like a nice piece of irony: Both GNOME and KDE perform like
shit. According to the opinion of both the GNOME and the KDE developers,
the reason for this must be somewhere in all the code they didn't
write. Hence, it has to be replaced. Especially considering that it's
all "But that's not how Microsoft does it!" stuff --- and you can't get
more fishy than that, can you?

The performance of GNOME3, KDE4 and Unity are all terrible. Too much shiny bling and too little care for *real* usability.

A couple days back, I was playing with Trinity on a PCLinuxOS live CD. Starting the applications **from the CD** was faster than doing the same from a KDE4 desktop *from an SSD*. At the time, I recall GNOME2 and KDE3 being slower than their earlier incarnations, but the sheer bloat and inefficiency of the current forms of all these desktops is incredible. In Trinity, I was shocked that I could click on System->Konsole and get a terminal... not in a second or two, or even half a second, but right there and then. That's how bad the current desktops are. I shouldn't have been surprised at being reminded how snappy a user interface could be--it should be a standard expectation. I'm not even using low-end hardware; it's an 8-core 4GHz CPU with 16GB RAM and a 4GB GPU! Using a current KDE system, I found the amount of sliding-fading-semi-tranparent bling really got in the way of using the thing. When every hovering popup on the taskbar slides in from random directions as you moved the mouse around, I found this massively distracting, and that's only the start of it. The other major flaw is the use of animations and transitions; they typically only start after you initiate an action, leading you to wait until they complete to avoid getting confused as to what will happen; previously such actions were immediate. The most jarring example I can think of is the alt-tab switching animation where you have to wait while there's visible movement of the selection, but the modern kickoff menu is also victim to this, and it's seen in many other places. These little details all make the system less efficient and less predictable--they make you second guess what action will take since you're unsure of what will happen due to waiting on the animations/transitions to catch up with your input.


Roger
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