From: Rodney Gordon II <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

<snip>

>I have nvidia-kernel-source installed and modules built for both of 
my
>kernels, 2.6.15.4 mainline and also 2.6.15-ck4. nvidia-glx and
>nvidia-glx-dev are installed, as are the proper libraries wine
>requires.

>Hardware:
>Pentium D 830 (3GHz dualcore)
>1.5GB RAM
>Asus P5LD2 Mobo
>nVidia 6600 256MB PCI-E

Not to sound flipant or anything are you using the amd64 port? Are 
you using emt64, or are you sticking with a 32 bit working 
enviornment.  Also are you using smp support in your kernels?

I know this might not have much to do with wine, and cedega working 
like it should, but it could explain the slow fps. I would install 
the amd64 port, and use a 32 chroot for all those 32 bit programs 
you still need. Also make sure you use an smp kernel, if your 
unsure about that look at dmesg and see each core come up.  

I would also make sure you using the most recent Nvidia drivers, as 
I know that it might take Debian a while to get the latest drivers 
as packages. They are supposed to have better support for dual core 
cpu's, which might be part of the problem your seeing.

Your GPU is also not know for its speed, have you turned down all 
the AA and stuff, for instance I play Quake 4 on a dual core 
Opteron 165 with ubuntu amd 64, and I have to turn every thing way 
down. I have a FX6600 gt, I mean I am running like 800x600 with all 
AA turned off just to keep the fps up on some maps. But ut2004 
plays like a dream, but I am gpu limited as it is right now, but it 
doesn't bother me too much.

If you don't get much response from this list you might want to post 
over on the amd64 list. As that really is where all the dual core 
64 bit talk is aimed at.

Gnu_Raiz


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