You have dual core so 60% means:
50% (full one core) is for decoding,
and the rest 10% is for audio, resizing etc.
You can't play the video correctly because your "decoder" is not
multithreaded and uses just the one CPU at its fullest.
Try using multithreaded version of mplayer "mplayer-mt" (in
Right click on a pdf file, select properties -> open with -> and select
evince instead of acroread.
That it the way to easily change default applications for gnome.
On Mon, Jul 5, 2010 at 11:53 AM, Helmut Jarausch <
jarau...@igpm.rwth-aachen.de> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I've discovered balsa , a great m
tions/wine
or search and delete the file that you told me (wine-extension-pdf).
The previous gnome instructions I told you should have worked though.
On Wed, Jul 7, 2010 at 4:25 PM, Helmut Jarausch <
jarau...@igpm.rwth-aachen.de> wrote:
> On 07/07/10 12:45:05, App Deb wrote:
> >
Do you want to use libvirt with virtualbox? If not (say you want to use it
with kvm or something else) try emerging libvirt without the virtualbox flag
using package.use .
Else try emerging virtualbox-ose or virtualbox-bin befire libvirt.
But this is probably a bug? libvirt should have virtualbox
You should never add that line in fstab in Gentoo. Don't follow random
tutorials about random distro workarounds. Gentoo bootscripts mount usbfs on
boot with gid=group=usb, so if you want to give user permissions for usbfs,
you add yourself to the "usb" group, you don't need to do anything else, an
should be pulled; if the code doesn't compile, use patches;
> if it has more than one conflicting USE flags, warn the user and use a
> default flag; anyway, it should never fail, specially like that.
>
> :-)
>
> On Wed, Jul 7, 2010 at 1:11 PM, App Deb wrote:
>
>>
If you are going to use any *nix, nvidia is the best option for years now.
The nvidia closed source drivers are of professional quality and have great
performance. Actually they are the *standard* for graphics in *nix, and many
(professional or not) applications actually support only nvidia.
The a
to make it work with the *nix
> kernels. However, they also do a lot of other funky stuff and keep people
> from being able to fully use the full extend of X. Just search this list
> (among others) for xRanderer and other components of X and you'll see the
> full story of nVidia
On Wed, Nov 24, 2010 at 7:00 PM, wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> new features, new problems...
> Recent multi-core CPUs modify the clock freqs of their core
> if only a subset of all cores are used.
>
> Are their any CONFIGs need to be set in the linux kernel to
> guarantee a stable system running those
On Fri, Nov 26, 2010 at 5:57 PM, Stroller
wrote:
> Hi there,
>
> As per subject, what's the best way to improve interactivity with heavy disk
> activity, please?
>
> Or perhaps a better question would be: what approaches are available?
>
> Presently my main Linux system is basically just a storag
On Sun, Nov 28, 2010 at 2:13 AM, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> On 11/28/2010 01:03 AM, Stroller wrote:
>>
>> On 27/11/2010, at 10:22pm, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
>>>
>>> The ck patch set does not support group scheduling anyway;
>>
>> Now I'm a little more confused. Does `ionice` need the CFQ schedule
On Sun, Nov 28, 2010 at 7:39 PM, walt wrote:
> I'm confused about which of all these various mechanisms apply to single-cpu
> machines. AFAICT Con's BFS (e.g.) is really a CPU scheduler and doesn't
> affect
> single-cpu machines very much. What about CFQ and group scheduling?
> Others?
>
> Tha
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