It is amazing - the transformation of computers since my first exposure in 1983. My first experience was intro to computers - Fortran programming using punch cards. It was 1985 before I saw a full screen editor. In 1986 I bought a Commodore 64 that had 64kb of RAM. It was plenty powerful to automate book keeping and other useful stuff. In 87 I bought an 8088 with an upgrade to 640kb of RAM. It had two disk drives, a 14" monochrome monitor, and a 300 baud modem. I acquired a copy of dBaseIII and I was having the time of my life. The next year I bought a 20MB HD. I thought I had arrived.

I am a purist in so may ways. I struggle with the business vs purist approach. I've argued in the past that it is better to spend $50 more a month on hardware than it is to spend hours each month trying to make something more efficient. From a truly business stand point it is more efficient to make up the difference by spending a little more on hardware than man hours.

Case in point. I am a lamp dev. I am looking at Drupal for a future project. Most would consider Drupal bloatware. I think at a minimum it is a recourse hog. If all things were equal I would rather build the app from scratch and make it as efficient as I can. The interesting thing is I might be able to get Drupal to do what I want in half the time. That equates to a lot of savings. The cost will be that it will require a server that cost $50 more a month.

It amazes me the amount of power it takes to run modern apps. My main box is an i5 with 8GB of RAM. That is a lot of power. I assume it will be viable for 7 - 10 years. Maybe in it's latter life it will not be my primary workstation, however it surely could be a test server or something along those lines.

On the other hand it amazed me when I was able to build a mail server running Centos 5 and Qmailtoaster on an old laptop running a 1Ghz Celeron w/ 256MB of RAM.


On 2014-06-22 00:32, kitepi...@kitepilot.com wrote:
To me bloat would be a bunch of daemons eating resources to the point
of exhaustion.
I installed KDE (had not done it in years) and seems to hug less resources now.
Still testing...
ET




Dennis Kibbe writes:

techli...@phpcoderusa.com writes:
What a great rant!! I was on my way to look for a video on HULU.... I
enjoyed this much more.

LOL I've enjoyed it as well. "Bloat" is one of those words that get thrown
around without really knowing what it means. (no offense to OP) If I
see the word in an article I want to know how the author measures
"bloat." To me bloat would be code loaded into memory that is never executed. dennisk
-- 27 Years 1987-2014
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