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guy | Message #2286, posted at 13:58, 15/6/2002, in reply to message #2285 |
Unregistered user | Pace are under no obligation to let ROL have "their" 32-bit version of ROS. You seem to be suggesting that ROL and Pace would have developed 32-bit independently. On the face of it this would have been absurd and it was quite right to knock the idea on the head. Such an absurd code fork that I wonder if I am missing something?
I said it was a big idea That's why we'd need to tap into the huge x86 developer community. A lot of work has to be done anyway, simply to convert the original code to 32-bit. In my experience, rewriting from scratch is a lot more efficient than picking over and updating old stuff, so the job doesn't scale in proportion to the changes. And let's face it, every OS was written from scratch once. and if you're going to do the port then, TBH, you're going to write a better OS than just port RISC OS otherwise you're not gaining very much. I disagree, at lest initially. Alright users wouldn't gain much at first, just save a few quid and get better support, but in the longer term we would gain the independence and freedom to develop just exactly that better OS which ROL can't resource. Linux has been around for ages - it's easy to forget just how long (and how many) people have been working on it. It's also easy to forget that Unix was a multi-flavoured mess, so GNU/Linux had to be reinvented as well as just rewritten. And the whole methodology of developing free software was being developed too. This all led to some nasty code forks and duplication of effort - gnome/kde, .tar.gz/.rpm/.deb and SuSE/RedHat filesystems spring to mind. ROS would be spared all this. |
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Matthias | Message #2298, posted at 13:58, 15/6/2002, in reply to message #2296 |
Unregistered user |
Have a look here: http://bluebirdy.de/ We ask the visitors to tell us, what they think about RISC OS Select... |
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rich | Message #2299, posted at 13:58, 15/6/2002, in reply to message #2296 |
Unregistered user | Ok, the poll system is probably very simple - only one option can be selected and no other user input. That's because it's a poll, not a census form! What are the maximum no. of options for the poll? If we know this, maybe we can suggest more sensible polls Basically, keep it simple. Polls are supposed to be a list of options, and ONE option is selected from it, not something that requires Spearman's Rank Correlation to get any sensible data out of it! |
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johnstlr | Message #2285, posted at 13:58, 15/6/2002, in reply to message #2284 |
Unregistered user | If Pace can do the 32-bit bit, why have ROL lost it? ROL haven't lost anything. Pace are under no obligation to let ROL have "their" 32-bit version of ROS. What bothers me about the announcement is that it seems 32-bit compatibility is no longer a priority. Two years ago when ROL was established it was but the announcement suggests that no work has been done on it. I am under no illusions that ROL do NOT currently have the resources to make the necessary alterations to RISC OS. In this respect the announcement makes sense, although it does mean that, for me anyway, there isn't really anything worth buying right now.
Do you have any concept of how long it takes to write something as complex as an OS from scratch? Remember RISC OS is over 250MB of source code and if you're going to do the port then, TBH, you're going to write a better OS than just port RISC OS otherwise you're not gaining very much. Linux has been around for ages - it's easy to forget just how long (and how many) people have been working on it. |
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Gulli | Message #2301, posted at 13:58, 15/6/2002, in reply to message #2299 |
Unregistered user | Ok, the poll system is probably very simple - only one option can be selected and no other user input. Sorry, this wasn't supposed to be a critisism - just an assumption about the system just so there's something to work from. What are the maximum no. of options for the poll? If we know this, maybe we can suggest more sensible polls Ok, here's one: |
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johnstlr | Message #2302, posted at 13:58, 15/6/2002, in reply to message #2300 |
Unregistered user | An increase in instruction size does not necessarily mean that the performance will be much faster at all. Intel's Itanium (one of the processors that will run 64bit windows) is not even clocked as fast as the current Pentia. It's hope that its VLIW architecture will allow a sufficient degree of paralellism to allow it to make up the difference (we will see). Agreed. The only real reason Windows is going 64bit is because Intel are as well. Those of you who develop on Windows and have access to the MSDN will also know that the issues for Windows developers going to 64bit (especially across COM) are greater than those for RISC OS going to full 32bit addressing. The difference is of course that RISC OS relies significantly on ARM code applications which are difficult to alter. MS will have to keep the Win32 API for compatibility - in fact it wouldn't surprise me if Win64 is built on Win32. Hence the OS gets bigger and slower. I think Itanium optimised apps will go faster than Pentium apps. The problem is that it'll take a little while for compilers to catch up (although I believe MS are actually ahead of the game for once).
Exactly. I was discussing this with a friend a while ago who was extrolling the virtues of his mega processor. I pointed out that, for all the effort expended by Intel and AMD, Windows doesn't feel any faster than it did back with 3.1. Ok the OS is significantly more complex but...
Actually....WinNT and 2K are quite solid...if you know what you're doing
Exactly. AIUI it's not really an issue for RISC OS. Consider why we want 32bit modes a) Faster processors Now the reasons for option a) are obvious. For b) AIUI we should be able to do away with Dynamic Areas as we'll have a flat, 4gig address space. Someone correct me if I'm wrong on this. |
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Mark Quint | Message #2277, posted by ToiletDuck at 13:58, 15/6/2002, in reply to message #2276 |
Quack Quack
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hehe, prolly the best idea btw, did u get my email 'bout CC?? |
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johnstlr | Message #2275, posted at 13:58, 15/6/2002, in reply to message #2271 |
Unregistered user | Annraoi - please don't take my comments personally - they're not aimed at anyone but you were the one who raised the points I wanted to reply to Hold on a minute folks. Well Omega has had clouds of doubt above it - not anymore. It's still some way off but I wouldn't place the blame for this entirely at MDs door. True without a an OS new hardware is useless. However the announcement suggests that there is going to be no OS - certainly not in any timescale worth waiting for.
Conversations I had at Wakefield suggest that hardware isn't really the problem.
I'm not willing to continue paying out for something that I deem either not worthwhile or as having a very dodgy future. Having used windows everyday for the last three years I can honestly say that all it's "features" that people keep dredging up are no longer true. It's not perfect (and the UI isn't as good as RISC OS) but it's a hell of a lot better than many people in the RISC OS market are prepared to admit.
I think it was downright inconsiderate.
The announcement suggests that they aren't willing to talk to people - no phone support, no guarantee that emails will be read... |
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