--- Abdelrazak Younes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> nusret wrote:

> Yes, this is known  but this is not related to
> painting at all. If you 
> open up your task manager you'll see that csrss.exe
> takes up 50/70% of 
> the cpu. We have yet to find the reason for this
> phenomena. But you'll 
> find out that 1.5 behave better than 1.4 in this
> area. The trick is to 
> separate big formulas from text with an empty line.

First, thank you very much for the trick. But I'm not
so sure that this is not related to painting at all.
For the following reason. I noticed csrss.exe, too (in
my case it usually takes up 35% of the CPU, but this
may have to do with Hyperthreading thing), and
searched web about it. I found two short descriptions,
one of which doesn't mention graphics at all:

http://www.neuber.com/taskmanager/process/csrss.exe.html

But I stumbled upon the following:

http://www.liutilities.com/products/wintaskspro/processlibrary/csrss/

The second link claims that most graphics operations
are managed by this executable. Also I saw some guy
referring to this program as (perhaps erroneously)
"client/server *redraw* subsystem". I'm not an expert,
and certainly I don't even think about lecturing you
guys, but I suspect it may still be related to
painting.


> 
> > as I've seen a bug report on this
> > together with a sample document of 6 pages by J.
> > Levon, IIRC. Nevertheless, I wanted to lobby on
> the
> > behalf of Windows users :)
> 
> Don't worry, there are some developers using Windows
> too.

Sure, otherwise there wouldn't be a windows version:
just lobbying, as I said ;).


> Abdel.
> 
> 

Nusret



 
____________________________________________________________________________________
Yahoo! Music Unlimited
Access over 1 million songs.
http://music.yahoo.com/unlimited


 
____________________________________________________________________________________
Cheap talk?
Check out Yahoo! Messenger's low PC-to-Phone call rates.
http://voice.yahoo.com

Reply via email to