Warren,
I'd concur. This application was hugely floating point intensive. Graphics ops were not an issue for us. The app used only low-level X11 calls (no Motif, or Xt calls even), so what graphics there were under OSX had to go through Apple's X11 layer before being seen. Most of the testing I had done was using the XServe as the compute host, with graphics being redirected to a remote terminal. But I still consistently saw about a 2x speed improvement when the app ran on YLD 4 vice OSX 10.3. <sigh> Many fond memories....

-Rob

On Dec 26, 2009, at 3:00 PM, Warren Nagourney wrote:

I think one needs to distinguish between the OS and the CPU. My experience with the G5 is that its floating point performance is between 1.5x and 2x as fast as the equivalent x86. Unfortunately, the fixed point advantages are not there. I use LaTeX a lot and heard that the typesetting speed improved on Macs (running OS X) when Apple switched to intel (same TeX source - this might me in part a reflection on the poorer PPC optimizations in gcc). The intel advantage might be 20% in LaTeX typesetting (this is a single data point from a commercial TeX).

On the other hand, the performance of the OS is another matter. Every linux I have installed on a Mac (or PS3) was much less responsive than OS X for similar operations. This is a combination of things like application launching speed and particularly graphics operations, which are slow in PPC linux since there are no good PPC drivers for video cards in linux. This is entirely a user interface issue and a PPC linux server might do very well compared to the competition (I have no experience with this). Of course, the speed of apps which don't use graphics should be the same between linux and OS X since they both use the same compilers.

Cheers,

Warren Nagourney

On Dec 26, 2009, at 8:09 AM, Rob Sanders wrote:

I haven't done much with YDL in some time as I've changed jobs, but I'd just like to chime in that several years ago that the PPC Linux's ( YDL for Mac, full RedHat/SuSE on some IBM OpenPower720 hardware) was running rings around the equivalent x86 -or- Alpha based platforms we were doing some work on. Tried to get my bosses & customers more interested in it and hit the wall of 'but it isn't x86'. <sigh>. At the time, a direct comparison of the *same* base code on a Mac XServe G5 running on YDL4 vice OS X 10.3 had the YDL code twice as fast as the OS X code. Lots of double precision floating point math, and multiple processes (not threads) communicating via shared memory. We would routinely max out any box we were running on.

-Rob

On Dec 25, 2009, at 2:37 PM, Warren Nagourney wrote:

Thanks, Derick.

Although this is a YDL forum, I am afraid to say that there is no comparison between any linux on PPC and OS X. The former simply doesn't have the software base that I need. I used to think that it would be faster than OS X, but after a few installations of linux on Apple computers, I discovered that OS X wins hands down in the speed area as well. I think that linux is optimized for x86 and of course things like flash are only available on x86 linux (I hate flash, but it unfortunately has become a standard for internet video). There are still some PPC optimizations in OS X apps and maybe even some Altivec usage (which allows Quicktime to smoothly run at 1080p on my PPC machines). The tasks involved in writing my book would have been enormously greater if I had used linux instead of OS X.

I notice an increasing dominance of ARM in low power portable devices. This is unfortunate, since ARM simply doesn't have the computational power that PPC has - I am not sure it even has a floating point data type. It is too bad that IBM did such a poor job of promoting PPC; we will need to reinvent the wheel with ARM when we could have had advanced multi-purpose chips with low power consumption from the PPC manufacturers (such as PA semi, which Apple bought and converted to ARM).

Anyway, the improvement in the performance of Apple products since the switch has been less than stellar, much less than expected from Moore's law. My 4 year old G5 has a 1.15 GHz memory bus and an 16x dual layer superdrive, which is very competitive with the best that Apple can come up with now (for reasonable prices). It cost much less than a current machine and doesn't require a several thousand dollar investment in software, which I would need to make if I use one of Apple's intel superboxes.

Cheers,

Warren Nagourney

On Dec 24, 2009, at 2:28 PM, Derick Centeno wrote:

You may want to know that you may find decent parts for your system
from http://macsales.com/

I think we may have to really keep our PowerPC running for longer than
that although I did hear of someone developing a multicore PowerPC
laptop a month or so ago. I've got to search for who this fellow is again as I lost track, but I did hear of a fellow who created a working
Cell based laptop which ran the GameOS and had the OtherOS option.
Pretty neat!

Caveat:  If you replace the power supply or other support parts you
shouldn't have trouble running YDL from it. Be careful regarding other components however such as DVD drives: if those go it may be wiser to consider an external DVD drive in that situation. I'm unsure if anyone we knew remains at Fixstars from TSS; it may not be so easy to get the kind of support we became accustomed to. In any case, I'd advise you to consider reviewing what notations remain regarding their advisories regarding which hardware works with YDL and which do not. As best I recall, the past emphasis (by TSS) was to support original Apple parts.

So the problems to watch for may not be RAM as much as internal
associated devices, such as a newer hard drive or modem or something
similar.  It may be better to just get an HD which resides on a PCI
card which your system should recognize with no problem as an external
system; I don't think such a drive would be able to be booted from
within YDL.  It would be interesting to try that out as a concept
though.

Anyway enjoy and all the best!!

On Thu, 24 Dec 2009 13:57:49 -0800
Warren Nagourney <war...@phys.washington.edu> wrote:

Thanks, Derick. I  still love the PPC architecture and recently
bought an Apple dual core 2.3 GHz G5 for very little money and am
finding it to be absolutely as fast as I could ever hope for. I will keep it for the next 3-5 years (assuming I can keep the power supply running) and maybe then, the dominance of x86 may have lessened (it
can't last forever!).

Merry Christmas and Happy 2010,

Warren N




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