On Sonntag 06 September 2009, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> On 09/06/2009 03:43 AM, Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
> > On Sonntag 06 September 2009, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> >> On 09/06/2009 02:23 AM, Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
> >>> On Sonntag 06 September 2009, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> >>>> On Sunday 06 September 2009 00:48:40 Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
> >>>>>> Also, have you considered that you got it all backwards?  The kernel
> >>>>>> configuration tells you that for lower latencies, you should use
> >>>>>> 1000Hz and PREEMPT.  It even says "Desktop" right there.  Why should
> >>>>>> I take your word over that of the kernel devs who actually wrote
> >>>>>> that code?
> >>>>>
> >>>>> low latency means bad throughput and that hurts IO.
> >>>>
> >>>> The average desktop user on Linux needs low latency. To get that, one
> >>>> must sacrifice some throughput efficiency.
> >>>
> >>> and then complain, that IO hurts?
> >>
> >> No one complains that IO hurts.  Perhaps you aren't even reading.  The
> >> complaints are about GUI stalls.  Not slow IO.
> >
> > yeah, and most GUI stalls happen with big io. ooops.
> >
> >>> btw, I think, I am an average user, doing the average stuff, and I am
> >>> pretty happy with 'voluntary preemption'.
> >>
> >> We are not.
> >
> > 'we'.
> >
> >>>> have you considered that there is a large population of users whose
> >>>> needs and workload are totally different from yours and therefore
> >>>> require something completely different to you?
> >>>
> >>> yes, but I consider my workload average. Surfing the web, watching tv,
> >>> watching movies with xine/vlc/mplayer. Listening to music with amarok
> >>> and alsaplayer. Typing stuff. Sometimes skype. Burning a dvd once in a
> >>> while. vegastrike, ut2004, if I want to play a game.
> >>>
> >>> See? Average.
> >>>
> >>> Now 32 sound streams in ardour (or whatever tool you use for that),
> >>> that is hardly 'average'.
> >>
> >> Doesn't matter if it's not average.  What does matter is that Linux is
> >> not up to the task while Windows and OS X are.
> >
> > and windows has a completly different, gui centric architecture. Oh, and
> > for serious audio stuff you need special low latency drivers. Humpf.
> >
> > So what was your point again? Windows needs special drivers for serious
> > audio stuff - and people are complaining that they have to turn on rt in
> > linux for the same tasks?
> 
> I don't even know why I keep talking to you.  You don't seem to *want*
> to understand.  It's not about special drivers.  Or specialized audio
> processing.  It's about my 3D desktop cube getting skippy sometimes
> while video is playing.  It's about the transparency effect applied
> while moving mplayer resulting in some frame skipping.  It's about a
> slight pause while scrolling a web page if I have an emerge running.
> About the mouse freezing for about 0.1 seconds once in a while while
> doing the same.
> 
> Can't you understand, or don't you want to understand?
> 

oh sure - I do understand. I just don't see that problems. Maybe because I 
don't use that cube. 

But if you have problems - why don't you sent your complains to lkml? When I 
gave Ingo Molnar some feedback early in CFS development he was very eager and 
sent patches to try.

You are complaining here, but I can not remember one single mail from you on 
lkml.

Why?

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