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Offline Tomas

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Re: I long for a decent OS.
« Reply #59 from previous page: January 06, 2007, 03:20:17 AM »
Quote

KThunder wrote:
geeze sorry about the rant. i see these kinds of thread too often. people complaining about the pcs that they use everyday and which do everything they ask. ok you dont like ms; ok you dont like windows. but all oss have drawbacks and benefits.
you dont want a decent os because any os you get will have some drawback to turn against, and any company that produces said os and succeeds will do something you dont like.

crap another rant. ummm...

[color=ff0000]Aros Rules[/color][/b][/i]

The only thing i miss in AmigaOS is memory protection and some full opengl support. Otherwise i think the OS is pretty much perfect for me.
 

Offline NoFastMem

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Re: I long for a decent OS.
« Reply #60 on: January 06, 2007, 05:00:33 AM »
Quote

Tomas wrote:

When i was talking about a txt editor, i meant something along the lines of notepad and a graphical equalent in the linux world. Even those has a noticable lag before they appear on the screen. Also things like opening a folder or similar seems to take too much time on both linux and windows. I want it to be so snappy that it gives the illusion of appearing right after pressing the button. Of course i cannot expect this with bigger office suites like word or openoffice, but i do expect it with simple and small applications. I guess it is just me who notice these things?  :-(



...Here on OS X, TextEdit, Preview, Calculator, the Flickr uploader all start in under a second. Navigating folders in the Finder is instantaneous. The only unreasonable wait I have is for iTunes, which has become horrifically bloated.
AKA that_punk_guy
 

Offline Dr_Righteous

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Re: I long for a decent OS.
« Reply #61 on: January 06, 2007, 05:26:29 AM »
Need a fast OS to run applications like word processors and such? Try MS-DOS! Seriously, get a Pentium class or better old system, slap on MS-DOS (or just the DOS portions of Win9x), and go for it. It boots nearly instantly, depending of course on your drivers (CDROM drivers usually take the longest, since they have an init delay). Use DOS based programs, they'll pop up quick!

I miss DOS.

AROS has some decent small applications, and boots quick as well. Dunno how well that'll work for ya, but it's a start.
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Mac Mini 1.5GHz, that might run MorphOS someday, when the fools who own it come to the realization that 30 minutes just isn\'t enough time to play with it enough to decide whether or not you like it enough to cough up $200.

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Offline koaftder

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Re: I long for a decent OS.
« Reply #62 on: January 06, 2007, 05:41:03 AM »
check out http://www.freedos.org/

Dos is easy to use, and its easy to roll out single solutions for things. I have a freedos floppy i made which pops up telex. I use a few old machines from time to time as simple text terminals.
 

Offline CannonFodder

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Re: I long for a decent OS.
« Reply #63 on: January 07, 2007, 01:08:05 AM »
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MenuetOS is an Operating System in development for the PC written entirely in 32/64bit assembly language, and released under License. It supports 64 and 32 bit x86 assembly programming for smaller, faster and less resource hungry applications.

Menuet has no roots within unix or the posix standards, nor is it based on any particular operating system. The design goal has been to remove the extra layers between different parts of an OS, which normally complicates programming and create bugs.

Menuet's application structure is not specifically reserved for asm programming since the header can be produced with practically any other language. However, the overall application programming design is intended for easy 64/32 bit asm programming. Menuets responsive GUI is easy to handle with assembly language.


http://www.menuetos.net/

People are hostile to what they do not understand - Imam Ali ibn Abi Talib(AS)
 

Offline A1k_man

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Re: I long for a decent OS.
« Reply #64 on: January 07, 2007, 02:44:30 AM »
Get an electric typewriter with 16k of ram and a floppy drive, they start up in a second or two, instant word processor.
\\"If a cluttered desk signs a cluttered mind, of what then is an empty desk a sign?\\" - Albert Einstein
 

Offline Minuous

Re: I long for a decent OS.
« Reply #65 on: January 07, 2007, 03:49:49 AM »
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NT4 was supposed to do much more than the humble Amiga too, so the comparison isn't very fair. Networking needed to be initialised, driver structures for any kind of graphics or sound or networking device installed, proper multi-threaded multi-tasking, some idea of multiuser capabilities, and so forth.


Well, the Amiga does initialize graphics and sound drivers, if you have a graphics or audio card. Otherwise RTG etc. wouldn't work. Same goes for networking devices. And are you really saying that Windoze has "proper multi-threaded multi-tasking" and Amiga does not? Blatantly wrong.

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I'm not saying that Windows is the pinnacle of stability, but it has improved over the years to the point where crashes indicate something really wrong,


No, it hasn't. I remember when XP had just been released I went into the computer shop and had tried out the included Microsoft-approved pinball game. Within 5 minutes XP had
crashed. I walked out laughing.

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amiga- no modern browser, office software


Yes there is. I use AWeb and it works fine for all the 1000+ pages I visit. There's also IBrowse and Voyager of course. I don't understand why some people seem to hate Amiga browsers. I haven't yet seen any sites where use of Java, Flash, ActiveX or such crap is actually of any benefit to the user. If such things were ported to AWeb I would regard this as a bad move, as it would be needlessly adding bloat and useless features.

As for office software, there's plenty of that around too. Granted, most of the best office software is commercial, but that applies to nearly every platform, not just the Amiga. Except Linux of course, I'm not sure if there's any commercial office software for that but that is probably due to lack of any market for it.

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APCI just doesn't work, in my experience. A bit like most features that are supposed to make life easier.. it's just badly implemented.


Agreed. Also I'm lucky if I can even get Windoze to shut down, it only succeeds about 10% of the time. The rest of the time it just hangs and I have to reboot manually and get hassled for supposedly not turning the damn thing off properly.

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you dont want a decent os because any os you get will have some drawback to turn against


What about OS3.9? Very close to perfect IMHO: fast, friendly, powerful, compatible, what more do you want!?

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Why is it that now, even with the best hardware money can buy, we are still expected to wait so long before we can actually do what we want to do?


I've wondered this too. It seems people have been conditioned since the Windows 3.x days to accept waiting for long periods for things to load/initialize. To me it is unacceptable, the solution is simple: don't run bloated crap, run something lean and mean. There has been a decline in the amount of software benchmarking that is done by eg. magazines. If people keep buying and using bloatware the situation will never get better.
 

Offline Dr_Righteous

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Re: I long for a decent OS.
« Reply #66 on: January 07, 2007, 06:49:09 AM »
Quote

Minuous wrote:
Quote
amiga- no modern browser, office software


Yes there is. I use AWeb and it works fine for all the 1000+ pages I visit. There's also IBrowse and Voyager of course. I don't understand why some people seem to hate Amiga browsers. I haven't yet seen any sites where use of Java, Flash, ActiveX or such crap is actually of any benefit to the user. If such things were ported to AWeb I would regard this as a bad move, as it would be needlessly adding bloat and useless features.


Two critical websites for me which require the use of JAVA... Radar images from the National Weather Service (US), and the web based version of Yahoo! messenger (since I prefer the real deal, not clones... and Yahoo! isn't likely to release an AmigaOS or AROS version of it).
- Doc

A4000D, A3640 OC-36.3MHz, custom tower, Mediator A4000D. Diamond Banshee 16M, Indivision AGA 4000, GVP HC+8.

Mac Mini 1.5GHz, that might run MorphOS someday, when the fools who own it come to the realization that 30 minutes just isn\'t enough time to play with it enough to decide whether or not you like it enough to cough up $200.

 - Someone please design SOME kind of DIY accelerator for the A4000. :D -
 

Offline Minuous

Re: I long for a decent OS.
« Reply #67 on: January 07, 2007, 09:18:28 AM »
If Yahoo don't want to support the Amiga then why are you supporting THEM?! Why would you want to use a web-based interface to an IM client, I suppose you read your emails through a web-based interface too!? LOL

And the weather example points out the bias most governments, who are supposed to be platform-neutral, have again the Amiga. Again, I would not use such useless, platform-centric "services" as a matter of principle. When they notice no one is using it they might start to ponder why, and change their policies.
 

Offline downward_sTopic starter

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Re: I long for a decent OS.
« Reply #68 on: January 07, 2007, 10:59:30 AM »
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CannonFodder wrote:
http://www.menuetos.net/


Interesting! Lots of stuff to play with now!

Thanks!

David
 

Offline Cymric

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Re: I long for a decent OS.
« Reply #69 on: January 07, 2007, 11:10:25 AM »
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MenuetOS is an Operating System in development for the PC written entirely in 32/64bit assembly language...

What a terrible waste of time. Coding in assembly language is a thing for dinosaurs or embedded applications, not for operating systems. Optimising compilers nowadays produce assembly code which is nearly as good as humans can make it; only when we get truly creative do we still hold the edge. But that requires extraordinary amounts of effort.
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Offline KThunder

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Re: I long for a decent OS.
« Reply #70 on: January 07, 2007, 01:22:50 PM »
have you done any programming? assembly or otherwise?
all compillers produce slightly different code, some are more efficient than others but none is as good as hand coding. some of us actually like assembly coding. with assebly you can conrol exactly how the machine runs in every respect.
actually operating systems are alot better if written in assembly or c, c with inline can be quite good if used carefully.
all compillers produce the same code that humans would using the generalizing effect of different commands since they get their info from us. you talk as if they are artificially intellegent or something. ad btw it doesnt take extraordinary amounts of effort. for small projects and anything that works in an environment it usually takes less. since you dont have to worry about what library files etc will do with other programs and what ou are doing. you just write the code you want to write.
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Offline Cymric

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Re: I long for a decent OS.
« Reply #71 on: January 07, 2007, 05:01:11 PM »
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KThunder wrote:
have you done any programming? assembly or otherwise?

Be serious. You have been a member of A.org for as long as I have, and that means you should know at the very least that I know my way around a C-compiler. In my case, SAS/C, AztecC and gcc.

I can also code in MC680x0 assembly, and did spend a few days in 80x86 when I had to circumvent several copy protection mechanisms. It was fun writing code for a CPU which resembles a stackmachine, although the general shortage of registers is annoying after a while. When I was a small Cymric, I learned Z80-assembly on my Schneider CPC464, although I was too young and inexperienced to make full use of it---that would now no longer be the case.

I have coded my own 'bare metal' demos on the Amiga. I have programmed dozens of utilities over the course of my PhD in order to analyse data. I have coded server-side web utilities to (ab)use CGI. I have quite some experience with compiler construction (as I find the concept of programmable virtual machines intruiging), and will delve into the mysteries of automatic memory management once my thesis is out the door.

I may not be a skilled programmer, and I certainly don't make my living from it. But I do know enough to understand what it takes, and to hold my own for a while amongst professionals.

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all compillers produce slightly different code, some are more efficient than others but none is as good as hand coding.

That was the case a decade ago. Nowadays the effort of streamlining the code produced by an optimising compiler does not outweigh the time you gain by doing it yourself. You also get higher-level expression syntax, maintainability and readability nearly for free. Those are exceedingly big plusses in my book.

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some of us actually like assembly coding. with assebly you can conrol exactly how the machine runs in every respect.

That is valid argument, and if you prefer the smell of bare metal, I'm not stopping you. But that doesn't mean I have to agree with the choice of you working in assembly for a certain project. And that's precisely what I'm doing here. For some things you still need to resort to assembly language simply because they don't have a proper higher level-equivalent---things like setting up the CPU in the proper 'mode', controlling the FPU-settings, bus communication, and so forth. Those are the fun bits too. But once those routines are in place, let the compiler handle the chore of translating your ideas into assembly language.
 
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actually operating systems are alot better if written in assembly or c, c with inline can be quite good if used carefully.

I don't know of many operating systems which don't use a mixture of assembly and C.

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all compillers produce the same code that humans would using the generalizing effect of different commands since they get their info from us. you talk as if they are artificially intellegent or something.

To some extent they are: we've programmed their logic, after all. They are as good as the ideas which go into them, and by now, those ideas are quite good. But they excel at one thing: doing the same thing over and over again. They don't get tired. They don't get sloppy. They do the job as we tell them to. If I take a look at this list of tips which I need to keep memorized while coding in assembly to make sure that things remain efficient, my first gut instinct is:  let the computer handle this. Especially in the case of timing loops and bus accesses. If I'm working on an idea, I want to see that idea working, not be bogged down in the details of how I should implement it.

Compilers suck at global optimisations, but that's the job of their human masters, really. A compiler cannot look at the code and tell the programmer 'Lookie here now: you're coding B-trees, but isn't a skiplist or hashtable better suited for your needs?' Compilers don't guard against bad algorithms.

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ad btw it doesnt take extraordinary amounts of effort. for small projects and anything that works in an environment it usually takes less. since you dont have to worry about what library files etc will do with other programs and what ou are doing. you just write the code you want to write.

Sure. Only with a higher-level language it goes much, much, much more quickly.
Some people say that cats are sneaky, evil and cruel. True, and they have many other fine qualities as well.
 

Offline KThunder

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Re: I long for a decent OS.
« Reply #72 on: January 07, 2007, 07:11:41 PM »
soooo basically you agreed with most of what i said but disagree that it is worth it. for the fun of it or whatever.

ok thats cool, somebody agrees with me, since they did write the os.

you did kindof contradict yourself though which was a part of my point. global optimizations are a part of program planning, with good modularity and proper planning keeping an entire system optimized is possible but that is true no matter the programming method. but on a smaller scale also even optimized compillers use more generalized code than can be done by hand.
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Offline ikir

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Re: I long for a decent OS.
« Reply #73 on: January 07, 2007, 07:15:34 PM »
Buy a Mac and never turn it off.
 

Offline whabang

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Re: I long for a decent OS.
« Reply #74 on: January 07, 2007, 07:27:09 PM »
MenuetOS has been around for ages, guys!
The compilers they had back then were probably a lot less effective than they are now. :-)

As for the topic, it's all about matching the OS with suitable HW. My main PC flies after I've spent a few hours optimizing Windows XP. Unless you really have to re-boot for some reason, then the hibernation function gets the system up and running in seconds.

I haven't used Syllable since it changed it's name from AtheOS, but it was a fun OS to play around with.
Beating the dead horse since 2002.