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Offline Cymric

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Re: OS4 on the pegasos
« on: June 03, 2004, 08:13:18 PM »
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KennyR wrote:
I'm no fan of nVidia - they make overhyped, hot, noisy cards that are strictly only for heavy gamers. I wouldn't get one.

I think you're overreacting a little. Some nVidias are indeed hot and noisy and overhyped, but the majority runs just fine. And if they are strictly only for heavy gamers, then exactly the same can be said for cards from ATi. If you never play 3D games, you can make do with just about anything on the market today. Hell, I'd haul out my trusty Matrox Millennium II in that case. There really isn't that much difference between the two brands, and the small discrepancies are blown right out of proportion by overzealous and myopic fanboys. Rather like the AmigaOne/Pegasos or Intel/AMD debates.

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But that said, MOS doesn't have any choice. nVidia don't give anyone access to documentation they need for making drivers. In fact, they've been known to legally threaten anyone who tries doing it on their own. nVidia support even on Linux is poor, and doesn't support 3D. Only the binary drivers nVidia release themselves for Windows (and which are notoriously buggy) have 3D support.

Once again I think you are overreacting a little. I have never been forced to upgrade drivers because of glitches (whether that is statistically meaningful is another thing, I admit), and under Linux, hardware accelarated OpenGL just flies on my GeForce 4. In fact, at the time I bought the card it was precisely because of ATis lousy OpenGL support under Linux that I had to get the GeForce.

I do agree with you that it is sad that nVidia so ruthlessly pursues its 'only we develop drivers for our hardware' stance. But I really can't bring myself to condemn the company for it.
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Offline Cymric

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Re: OS4 on the pegasos
« Reply #1 on: June 08, 2004, 08:57:04 AM »
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Waccoon wrote:
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What about Future games releases and compatibility with a PC? You see by nature I'm a Pc user but like a lot of other people I'm getting fed up with the sluggishness of the os even with a high power machine...

I think it's a myth that an efficient OS can run better on lower spec hardware.  Even BeOS runs like a slug on my Celeron 400 with the nVidia TNT2 Ultra card.  The OS really matters for memory management.  The development libraries for Windows aren't too bad for efficiency -- it's the junk running in the background that sucks, and Win2K lacks much of the trash that comes with XP.  Besides, memory is more expensive for the PPC.  It matters little to me that Windows idles on 100+MB or memory, when 512MB is easy to afford, depending on what speed you want.

I've read on various sites that one of the reasons a machine might be sluggish is a sh*tload of spyware and other nasty things infecting your computer. I have had the pleasure of experiencing this myself---even on a fully patched Win2K-system... (That is one good reason for sure to switch OS, but that's a different subject.) It might be worthwhile to check out what is secretly running behind your back.

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My Win2K system boots in 20 seconds flat with $400 worth of motherboard, CPU, and memory, plus a good ATA100 hard drive which will run you about $80-$100.  Prebuilt PCs are a different issue entirely, but then, you'll have to build an AmigaOne or Pegasos machine yourself, or ask a dealer to make one for you.

A few days ago I took a peek at Alienware's site. Personally I think they sell snake oil (who on Earth needs a 64-bit CPU in a system, and why would you need personalised benchmarking specs for your machine...?) but you have to admit: the case looks pretty cool.
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Offline Cymric

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Re: OS4 on the pegasos
« Reply #2 on: June 08, 2004, 11:16:15 AM »
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bloodline wrote:
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who on Earth needs a 64-bit CPU in a system,...?


Exactly! We should all have stuck with our MOS6502's!!! who needs a 16-bit CPU in a system? :-D

No, seriously. There are obvious examples where 64-bit designs are better and more efficient than a 32-bit one. Given the facts that very few people run these special applications at their own home, that everyday games are not amongst those, and that said systems are offered to game fanatics, I can only conclude one thing: you're being ripped off. It is just show. (Of course, you allow yourself to be ripped off, but I am very, very wary of the claim that such a system offers better performance over the regular 32-bit ones.)

There will come a day when 64-bit chips are 'hot', but this won't happen any time soon. It's going to be a mixed thing, with people experimenting with multiple cores and 64-bit extensions. Perhaps we'll see them arrive together.
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Offline Cymric

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Re: OS4 on the pegasos
« Reply #3 on: June 08, 2004, 11:55:18 AM »
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ikir wrote:
[...] And the Articia bug... doesn't exist. Has been proven but you want to spred false information. Pegasos 1 have a useless hardware workaround, OS4 betateste have a working idedivice with dma at full speed and without any workaound, only driver written right with articia support.

After trawling across heated debates on old and forgotten forums I started to wonder that if indeed the infamous bug was based on a misunderstanding of obscure, but documented subtleties of the Articia S, what it was that that was actually fixed in hardware on the Pegasos. But I guess we'll never know.
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Offline Cymric

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Re: OS4 on the pegasos
« Reply #4 on: June 08, 2004, 05:33:23 PM »
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KennyR wrote:
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Bhogget wrote:
The drivers exist - in binary form - but they're good drivers, they're free (as in beer) and they fully support the card features.
Good if you define "good" as being "incompatible and buggy as hell", that is. The complaints of Linux users about these drivers are constant. Change kernel, you have to wait for update. Choose any CPU but x86, too bad. This goes totally against the Linux mindset.
Aren't you extemporising again and again? Mind, you are entitled to your opinion, but the original statement was 'no drivers available under Linux for nVidia graphics cards'. Which is plain wrong. Now over a few messages the statement has transformed to 'no free, bug-free, open-source, company-supported drivers under Linux available for nVidia graphics cards', which of course is true.

You can complain about it 'not being the Linux mindset' to offer binary-only drivers and being barred from accessing chipset documentation to write your own drivers, but this is beginning to sound like the infamous KDE/Gnome flame war. Gnome is a huge waste of time, manpower, programming effort and disk space, just to avoid one slightly restrictive (read: non-GPL) license. And in the end the problem ceased to exist thanks to Trolltech's change of mind.

Unfortunately, with Windows' dominance over the games and media market, I fear it will be a very long time indeed before you get access to hardware documentation. In fact, I think we should be grateful that there is at least some support for 3D on Linux. And yes, ATi's support is a little better in the sense that they provide qualified 3rd party Linux developers with development kits. Emphasis on little.
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Offline Cymric

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Re: OS4 on the pegasos
« Reply #5 on: June 10, 2004, 09:50:10 AM »
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Waccoon wrote:
What bugs me is that people seriously think this is a Windows-only problem.  Even Linux distroes come loaded with bloat these days if you don't look around. What matters to me is how easy it is to get rid of the junk, and how many places spamware can hide.  Windows is infamous for this, but many other OSes aren't much better.  Download AppPaths and you can snuff out 95% of spamware from the registry.  It's not as bad as people think.

First a little clarification: when I wrote the reply, I wasn't writing it to you, but to the person complaining about sluggishness of his PC. I malquoted, and for that I apologize. However, this answer is for you.

It is a Windows-only problem, as spyware is specifically designed to be obnoxious, insidious, hard to remove, and to not do anything useful except pointing your browser at vague sites and displaying advertisements you don't care one iota about. Or worse. Plus it cripples your machine in the process. I've had Windows Explorer and my audio drivers crashing all the time thanks to some little punks idea of a good program. The worst thing is that if your machine is compromised, it seems to attract a sh*tload of other crap, almost as if these programs know they've found a nice spot to hide.

And believe me, there have been examples of malicious code which are exceedingly clever at hiding themselves, going as far as removing themselves off of the main task lists, so the process doesn't show up anywhere but still runs in the background. On any halfway decent OS, such a thing would be impossible to achieve. Yet someone managed it under Windows. Check out this link for some hairy stories. Yes, you can remove them with programs like Spybot or HijackThis. But sometimes even those programs are not enough---and your 95% removal success still means there's 5% {bleep} left. I want everything removed. Or, even better, not have to go through the trouble of running these programs twice a week to see what got in this time.

You are confusing easy-to-remove, not-designed-to-hide bloat of applications with truly sneaky spyware. The first is slightly annoying, but once you remove it, it's gone and won't come back. The second is much more obnoxious. Please make sure you know the difference between the two, and thus also why it definitely is a Windows-only problem: namely because the OS has more holes in it than Swiss cheese.

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Athlon64 is a good performer and cost comparible to the 32-bit P4.  Where's the ripoff?

It being touted as a superior machine to run games on, because it's not. Emphasis on superior. I have no doubt it performs well, but that's where the buck stops. It is purely for ego-flattering and show, and I consider that a ripoff. YMMV.
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Offline Cymric

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Re: OS4 on the pegasos
« Reply #6 on: June 12, 2004, 01:29:48 PM »
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Waccoon wrote:
Uh, so just HOW does all that prove it's a Windows-only problem?

I've read through your reply, and I think that you are still not clear on what exactly I mean with spyware. Spyware to me are malignant browser extensions which take advantage of bugs in the browser to make sure you visit sites or see advertisements you normally would avoid. In addition, some spyware might track what you are doing in order to establish a user profile. Some might register keystrokes in order to capture passwords or credit card details. A select handful will jump out of the browsing environment and hack themselves into the main system. Spyware is designed to enter the system via the browser and be hard to remove for someone without knowledge of OS internals. And most importantly, it installs without your knowledge or say-so.

While equally malignant and despicable, I do not consider keyloggers on an OS level or packet sniffers (i.e., programs which are not dependent on the browser to function) to be spyware, although it is exactly what they do: spy.

That is why it is a Windows/IE-only problem: no other combination I know of allows such easy hijacking and modification of the browser by outside parties, despite you trying your best to surf cleanly and patch your system as often as you can. While I applaud your ingenuity to bypass Firefoxes built-in popup blocker, I notice that it has very little to do with the insidious means at which spyware gets into my Windows system. Bypassing a Javascript function is one thing, adding machine-executable code to the browser is quite another.

Just to give you a taste of the situation I find myself in: I run Windows 2000 SP4 with IE6. The system is fully patched. All services not critical to my daily job of using the computer have been disabled: therefore no Telnet, no NetBIOS over TCP/IP, no domain features (as this is a stand-alone machine) and much more. I do not use an Administrator account to operate the machine. I have not loosened to access permissions on \WINNT and \Program Files, despite my losing several useful utilities which assume more lenient access rights in the process. I check the event logs regularly, and have various anti-spyware tools installed: CWSShredder, HijackThis, Spybot, and thanks to your generous hint, AppPaths. (HijackThis and AppPaths are rather similar in design and do more or less the same.) I have disabled ActiveX, Java and active scripting; I only enable the latter for sites I trust (Amiga.org, a Dutch newspaper, a few forums for board games). I rarely install software, and most of it is either scientific, or a game demo from a respectable (read: trustworthy) site. I use Eudora for email. I do not look at attachments: email from senders I do not know is deleted on sight. I do not visit pr0n or warez sites. I do not use P2P-programs. Noone else uses the computer. You now have some idea about what I did to and do with the machine, I hope.

Let's continue. You seem to have built up an enviable record of holding off the crap, and based on your repairing experience, have come to realise that people are, and I quote, 'morons who allow melicious software on their machine willingly'. Let us assume for the sake of the discussion that I am such a moron. I must be, because I find spyware on my machine twice a week. Considering that my 'net behaviour on Windows 98SE/IE5.5 and Linux/Mozilla 1.4 was far more promiscuous than under Windows 2000, and that I never got a single infection under those two systems, I am really, really interested in hearing your opinion as to why and how it got onto my Windows 2000 system, but not the other two. As en encore, take into account that the Windows 98 system was unprotected: no virus scanner, no firewall.

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If spyware gets on a Linux system, how many files do you have to check to trace all executables that run when the system is started?  How do you tell if a process "CCStart" is malicious or not?  What if the app hides itself by patching another executable?  Do you think any "real" OS is immune to stuff like this?  What about the fact that you have to log into root to install some kinds of software?  Spyware can't patch system files, then?

I have yet to see it happen as easily as it does on my Windows system. I have experienced two break-ins into a Linux-cluster, and both were caused by me and another sysadmin not knowing that lpd (the printer daemon) had security issues. I have never seen a break-in via a browser. I very, very much doubt said program would have gotten in that way, and thus it does not belong to the class of spyware I was talking about. Perhaps your definition of spyware is different from mine, as you seem to draw in much broader aspects of computer security than just the ones affecting the browser because later on you wrote:

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UNIX is famous for lousy security.  If you don't believe that, read some decent books on UN*X architecture.  This is most definately not a Windows-only problem.

Excuse me while I laugh. If there is one OS which is famous for lousy security, it's Windows. Yes, Unix is not totally secure either, and suffered from major break-ins and worm damage. Yet most break-ins were caused by social hacking, and the last great worm which targetted Unix was many years ago. But the far more modular design makes it inherently more robust than Windows ever will be. Plus that you can see and modify a lot of the source code of the programs you use. That is not a guarantee it is safe (find out at your own peril, I would say to anyone who believes this), but it does make scrutiny a whole lot easier.

Unix in the hands of a newbie can be made to be very vulnerable. If you stick to the default installation of your everyday Linux distribution, a cracker just might still get in. But it will cost him a lot of effort, and it will most certainly not be via the browser.

In any case, this discussion is really way off-topic and in order to keep the noise on the forum down a little, I am willing to continue it  using other channels.
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Offline Cymric

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Re: OS4 on the pegasos
« Reply #7 on: June 14, 2004, 12:48:29 PM »
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Hammer wrote:
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It is a Windows-only problem

Try using google on spyware and linux e.g. http://www.google.com.au/search?q=Linux+spyware&ie=UTF-8&hl=en&meta=

Slapping two words together and feeding them to Google's search engine does not mean that the pages turned up have relevant information on them. May I politely suggest you click on a few of the links thus returned and try and find stories of users claiming spyware got into their Linux machines? I have clicked on dozens (literally), but haven't been able to find any.

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It being touted as a superior machine to run games on, because it's not

Why not post some benchmarks e.g. UT2003, UT2004, FryCry, AquaNox2, X2 "The Threat", Quake3 and 'etc'.[/quote]
Ouch! :oops: :oops: :oops: Is my face red... Yes, I have to stand up and admit that I was very, very wrong here. Apparently things have improved considerably since I last read a review on 64-bit CPUs!

Looking back, I can understand why I thought it shouldn't make (much of) a difference. One of the conclusions of the very first review on 64-bit CPUs over at Tom's Hardware was that you really needed proper 64-bit code in order to see a (minor) difference. A second conclusion was that standard 32-bit code (most programs, including games) would not really profit from a 64-bit CPU, save for the case when SSE and SSE2 instructions were used. Apparently games are no longer using table lookups in order to avoid some costly mathematical function evaluations...  

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I have no doubt it performs well, but that's where the buck stops
Try “Transaction Per Second”(TPS) benchmarks.[/quote]
I think I specifically stated that there are undoubtedly areas and applications where 64-bit systems outperform 32-bit ones, but that it is highly unlikely that ordinary home users will be working in those areas or with those applications. I think transaction management can be classified in that category.
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