[mdlug] Parallella: A Supercomputer For Everyone by Adapteva — Kickstarter

Aaron Kulkis akulkis00 at gmail.com
Sun Oct 14 03:29:38 EDT 2012


Adam Tauno Williams wrote:
>
>>> My issue is that comparing the performance difference perceived
>>> between a 1980s platform and its applications and a 20xx platform and
>>> its applications is very apples-and-oranges.  There are many
>>> significant both technological and philosophical differences.
>>> I also don't believe there is a performance problem;  I'm very
>>> satisfied with the performance of the devices and applications I use.
>>> In my experience performance, on the same hardware, has noticeably
>>> *improved* in the last several years.  LibreOffice, for one example,
>> churns through my data an order of magnitude faster than it did a
>>> couple of years ago.  The big Java app I use all day (DbVisualizer) has
>>> gotten perceptibly faster with every release.  The start up delay I
>>> used to see with .NET apps like Monodevelop and F-Spot is simply gone.
>
>> How much memory was in your system back then, and how much now?
>
> My spare/backup/around-the-house laptop is unchanged from the day I installed it in ~2006. It has 4GB of RAM.  That laptop is what I use for performance evaluation as I'd consider anything older than 6 years to be junk (at $20 a month that is 20x6x12=$1,440 - twice replacement cost).   I use it for all my book keeping, a lot of online research, and LibreOffice work.
>
> I suspect adding an SSD could add a few years of service to that laptop as the only slow drown is when the drive light is flashing.  The initial boot up and login is quite slow - but once the apps are open performance is very good.  Adding the latest GNOME 3.6 version of gnome-shell helped it noticeably,  the old i915 family GPU handles it gracefully.
>

Throw in new hard drive and you'll probably get a few more years of
life out of it.

I have a 2006 laptop, originally equipped with 2x 100GB hard drives.
Currently it has 1x 640GB + 1x 320GB in it.  I plan on upgrading both
to 1 TB each, within the next year.

I'm actually surprised that I've kept this thing this long.


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