Rasterman Responds To Seth And Havoc 423
An anonymous reader writes "Rasterman, of Enlightenment fame, has responded to Seth Nickell and Havoc Pennington's blog entries, which were in reference to this previous article. about Next gen X rendering. Raster says: 'Well it seems the XDevConf has produced some interesting blogs and discussion. I'm a bit sad I was not able to attend (no funding at all), as there seems to have begin a lot of discussion and moves in directions we in Enlightenment land have been going for years, and are likely far ahead in. I guess this means we haven't been able to share our experience in this. Maybe next year. Anyway the point is that this has started up some musings from Seth Nickell and Havoc Pennington related to this. This is great - finally people are beginning to take seriously what the Enlightenment crowd have been talking about for years.'" (Note: the previous post was about Nickell's post, not the other way around.)
for more to the date info (Score:5, Informative)
has alot of responces from raster on this subject so its worth a read and there also seems to be some progress on the whole debate
Re:for more to the date info (Score:3, Insightful)
Talk is cheap, and it takes a lot more than a couple of guys with fancy nicknames to build a reliable modern GUI over Linux.
Re:for more to the date info (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The Big Question (Score:4, Informative)
rasterman's page is slashdotted, but mirrordot to the rescue [mirrordot.com]..
So where is the response? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:So where is the response? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:So where is the response? (Score:2)
Those were the days...
xmkmf -a ; make ; make install
Re:So where is the response? (Score:2)
<obvious joke goes here>
Maybe I'll emerge e later.
It might be a fun dissonance, to have a little shell script that randomly flops between Enlightenment and Ion3 [modeemi.fi], my current WM.
Because, really, when did Emacs care fig #1 about the WM, much less X?
Re:So where is the response? (Score:4, Funny)
Does this support multiple levels of alpha-blended transparency and painting of a GL canvas which can be mapped onto arbitrary surfaces?
Re:So where is the response? (Score:3, Funny)
I run Gnus, ECB, and ERC in separate Emacs instances,
And Firefox for browsing.
You just ALT+x to get where you want to go.
The smell of the under-engineering resembles that of the air in the countryside in Spring, flowers abloom, just after a bit of rain.
Performance un-suffers as well, anti-staggering under the non-weight of chrome and tailfin involved in the whole contra-design.
I may want to install E17 anyway, just to re-live the di
Re:So where is the response? (Score:4, Interesting)
Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:2, Insightful)
Anyone have any ideas if he plans to address performace as well?
- Cary
--Fairfax Underground [fairfaxunderground.com]: Where Fairfax County comes out to play
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:5, Insightful)
I can easily counter that on my dual-boot system with Windows XP, Fedora, and a tweaked Gentoo, both Linux distro's are far, far more "sluggish" than Windows is. Oddly enough, what gives Windows a real kick in responsiveness is the I/O subsystem. Running Windows 2000 on a 400Mhz PII laptop was dog slow. Running Windows XP on a 400Mhz PII with SCSI RAID underneath and it flies. Linux/X11 does not on the same hardware, regardless of optimizations, distros, windowing managers, etc. I use this largely as a plaything, and as such have played with a LOT of distros, tweaks, and window managers over time.
So are you right? Am I right? We don't know. Does anyone have *real* data or studies on this, or just a bunch of anecdotes?
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:3, Informative)
Trying running "x11perf -all" sometime to give you an idea of just how fast an X-server is at executing basic operations.
Obviously, these don't illustrate what the overall end-user experience is going to be like, but they do show how fast the underlying X-server is working.
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:3, Insightful)
This problem is greatly amplified on my new dell laptop (my work computer). With only a 40k RPM hard disk, just about anything that causes any disk activity results in the computer ignori
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:3, Informative)
Good enough? There are plenty of benchmarks that reproduce this, if you want to search for them.
It really depends on a number of variables. Do you have ext3 for the FS? Maybe some options are slowing things down. Or maybe debug is turned on for ReiserFS. I mean if someone claims that WinXp is sluggish and we find out that it is on a Fat32 FS that has never been defragged, well...
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:4, Informative)
There are a number of things you have to ensure:
- you're running a recent kernel, optimized for your hardware
- you're using an accelerated driver (this makes a HUGE difference). If you have recent hardware, this means running a binary driver which isn't likely to be installed by default.
- you have dma enabled (you'd be surprised how many linux machines don't have dma turned on for the drives, which results in only a tenth of normal drive performance)
- you're not loading more software than you have ram for (same rule as windows, run a small enough set of software so it doesn't have to swap in and out parts constantly). This happens less nowadays, but it used to be that a "complete" install would leave a linux system almost unusable because of all the services filling up the ram.
My personal experience is that X is fast and responsive if it and the linux install it runs on are configured correctly. I have an athlon 700 running kde3 which is extremely responsive. OK, so it's anecdotal evidence yet again, but the fact that people do have responsive X systems does say something about X's potential for performance, right?
By the way. Don't switch distro's to try to fix problems. Only switch distro's because you like the underlying philosophy of the other distro better. It's my personal experience that any distro can be made to do anything any other distro can be made to do. It may not be as easy, but it can always be done. After all, underneath they're all running the same code.
You are apparently an idiot (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:2)
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:2, Insightful)
May i suggest the sluggishness is perhaps more related to your desktop enviroment (even though i find KDE 3.3 to work fine on computers that windows XP would strugle on)Using blackbox/fluxbox or so on , you could run happily on a rather old machine
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:3, Insightful)
In what way? I'm not running very fast hardware (1.2MHz Athlon and a cheap video card) and everything X does is instantaneous.
Now, there are lots of dog-slow programs out there, but I can't think of anything where I've felt X was a problem. Basicly it feels to me that hardware is well past the point where the X overhead is negligable compared to the `programmer felt he needed to include animated semi-transparent pen
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:5, Informative)
I haven't used Windows in years, but when i do see it, the thing that stands out is that desktop rendering is noticeably faster and smoother than any X server I have, excepting maybe my SGI O2 running IRIX.
I also have an iBook running OS X, and while it has problems resizing windows really smoothly (though i can't visibly see repaints like I can under X), everything else feels a lot faster and slicker than XFree86/Xorg etc.
Now, i'm sure it's not the X protocol that is the problem, but the difficulty in synchronising X windows to the VBI and also in the extremely poor implementation of alpha-blending and the rendering
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:2, Insightful)
I can do that on a P3-600. Seriously. You have a configuration problem.
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:2)
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:3, Informative)
So do I. SuSE 9.2, KDE. As an aside, the SuSE 9.2 Professional retail box was one hell of a purchase.
Neither could I, at first, because the drivers SuSE 9.2 has are inadequate. You have to download and install a better driver from the NVidia Web site and install 'em. You won't get the driver through SuSE updates, either, presumably because the driver comes with the "kernel taint" o
Speed issue (Score:5, Insightful)
Working on my NVidia equpped box here (GeForce Ti, nvidia drivers, but for 2D 'nv' is almost as good) X is much snappier than I usually find WinXP to be. Turning on RENDER acceleration has helped a lot.
I'm sure folks will bring up the "because of the network" myth up here, so let's get this straight - any slowness in X is not because of network support. Go ask Keith Packard, I'm pretty sure he's been rather clear on the matter more than once. My personal, very much non-expert understanding is that most performance issues peope experience are due to limited hardware acceleration and inferior drivers.
If you don't believe me about how much difference the hardware and drivers make, go find an S3 based system, preferably S3 Trio32/S3 Trio64, and compare it to a PCI-based (to keep it fair) NVidia GeForce 4 MX on the same hardware. It's like they're two totally different computers - the change is jaw-dropping. I use thin clients a lot, so I care strongly about video performance and tend to notice these things.
It's also worth noting that hopefully many of these plans will lead indirectly to performance improvements, by making RENDER acceleration and RENDER optimisation pretty much mandatory.
Re:Speed issue (Score:3, Insightful)
Hold on there. "Few people need the network transparency"? How about "Few people bother to take advantage of the network transparency because they aren't used to thinking that way". If you bothered to set systems up to take advantage of X11's network transparency you'd be using it all the time too. The network transparency is a huge advantage. I can (and often do) have applications running on
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:5, Insightful)
Not on the local machine. For local displays it doesn't use any networking at all. It uses UNIX pipes which are very fast and also DRI (Direct Rendering Interface) to talk directly to the video hardware.
I wish this myth would disappear. X only uses networking when using it over a network.
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:2)
X is already very fast. It's the perception of speed that's critical, though, and X11 (or rather the widget sets and their lack of drawing synchronization) does appear to feel more sluggish even though it is not.
For example, the GUI feels silky smooth on my powerboo
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:2)
the biggest strength of x, the separation of display and communication layers, is also its bigges weakness.
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:2)
Explain where the weakness lies. X is more than fast enough locally. Yes, various people have claimed the extra context switches slow things down. But I've yet to see a single benchmark to back up their claims. And even if the benchmarks show X to be slower than $OTHER_DISPLAY_SYSTEM, does it matter? Have you ever seen an application that runs too slowly (i.e. noticable by an end user, not a microben
Re:Pretty is nice, but performance is better. (Score:2)
Well (Score:3, Interesting)
I read rasterman's post expecting to find whining about how enlightenment isn't getting enough attention, blah, blah, blah....
Instead I want to go install it when I get home. Weird. I suppose I could try something new... :-)
Re:Well (Score:3, Interesting)
It's one thing to have a GUI that shows up all my win32 using friends, but when the mac geeks are taken aback at my windowing environment, it's something else entirely.
Re:Well (Score:2)
not that kde or gnome can claim better these days.
Re:Well (Score:3, Interesting)
Judging by the videos on Rasterman's site, E17 is neither functional nor beautiful. All I saw was some konfabulator/dashboard style gadgets with some hideous window decorations, a cool moving background that would be an absolute nightmare to have going while one works and some other useless eyecandy.
The technology behind all that might be interesting but it'll need someone who doesn't know the words 'gee whiz' to make an efficient, usable environment out of it.
Clear as mud (Score:5, Funny)
Ah, thanks for qualifying this. Now it is about as clear as a galaxy full of dark matter.
And... (Score:5, Funny)
e17 to ship with Duke Nukem Forever!
Rasterman, you're brilliant; but in the immortal words of Guillermo Díaz [imdb.com]:
Wrap it up B!
Had no idea. (Score:2)
Oh Wow - watch the two avi files ... (Score:2)
Re:Had no idea. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Had no idea. (Score:3, Insightful)
Fedora Yum Repo (Score:2)
What? (Score:2, Funny)
It's not enough that people don't read the articles? Now Slashdot is actively discouraging them from reading the summaries?
You'r reading it out of order! (Score:5, Funny)
"Rasterman Responds To Seth And Havoc"
RasterMan, defender of good finally reengages his age old enemies Seth, and his evil master Havoc.
Re:You'r reading it out of order! (Score:5, Funny)
Well, these are the X men, you know.
Re:You'r reading it out of order! (Score:2)
Text mirror (Score:5, Informative)
Enlightenment the experimental toolkit
Well it seems the XDevConf has produced some interesting blogs and discussion. I'm a bit sad I was not able to attend (no funding at all), as there seems to have begin a lot of discussion and moves in directions we in Enlightenment land have been going for years, and are likely far ahead in. I guess this means we haven't been able to share our experience in this. Maybe next year. Anyway the point is that this has started up some musings from Seth Nickell and Havoc Pennington related to this. This is great - finally people are beginning to take seriously what the Enlightenment crowd have been talking about for years.
What I'll go into is some of the things Seth and Havoc talk about that we have already done and are well under way or very mature. Things we have advocated for years and have already solved - quite optimally. Our designs are forward-looking and just WAITING for drivers to catch up and stop "sucking". I could write essays about the many ways to address this issue alone (XRender), but I won't go there this time. I've been there before.
First let me talk about Seth's blog. He discusses "Next-Generation Rendering For the Free Desktop". This is great. this is just what we need... oh wait. it's just what we've been DOING for years!
Now he goes on to say what this will enable: "Toolkit themes that draw with layer blending effects" - Done. EWL, Evas, Edje. "Indiana Jones buttons that puff out smoothly and animated clouds of smoke when you click on them". OK - we don't have the smoke - but we have all the animation, glinting in the light, fading, glowing, sliding, etc. etc. etc. We have an entire engine devoted to just this (Edje), a theme description language, compiler, scripting engine, compressed theme format usable "live" without installation etc. He goes on to talk of "Alpha transparency whenever you want" - Done. Evas. Live window thumbnails - XRender has to improve something WICKED for this to be sane.
files/e17_movie-02.avi
files/e17_mov
stunning (Score:5, Informative)
all the nice effects that mac and longhorn will be doing next year could be tied into xorg/gnome within 6 months.
all rasters stuff is on freedesktop.org, so it's all open.
in a perfect world, someone like novell would hire raster to work with the gnome xorg devs. get evas+cairo into the desktop stack, and have gnome 2.12 running with some amazing eyecandy.
Re:stunning (Score:2)
people could be using this on the desktop in 6 1/2 months time.
it's all well and good saying it's in osx now, but the majority of people are on x86, and osx is CLOSED. this is all open standards and open code.
Re:stunning (Score:2)
Re:stunning (Score:2)
Re:stunning (Score:3, Funny)
Re:stunning (Score:2)
That's odd because to get E17 working you need to compile from CVS, which requires, at the least, that you install RPMs for various packages from EFL, which includes edje.
I would suggest one of three possibilities:
(1) You are not running Enlightenment at all.
(2) You are running E16.7 and somehow have this confused.
(3) You are running some very ver
Re:stunning (Score:3, Informative)
You're missing the point again.
I got a message from the Rasterman (Score:3, Funny)
looks like rasterman should be a bit pro-active (Score:2, Insightful)
I mean to most people his next-gen enlightenment desktop shell is going to come out around the same time that Duke Nukem Forever game comes out.
Maybe, I don't know, be nice and try to get the attention of other developers. I understand that they are doing cool stuff, and tried it out myself a couple months ago.
but I get the impression that enlightenment just likes operating out of a vaccum.
Re:looks like rasterman should be a bit pro-active (Score:3, Interesting)
The E community seems very closed. That's not to say they aren't welcoming of new members, just that they don't reach out. At all. They don't appear to participate in any of Freedesktop's [freedesktop.org] activities, and tend to keep to themselves, plodding al
E17 in the Gnome Desktop Environment (Score:3, Interesting)
fame? (Score:5, Interesting)
Get something working, then throw it out and start over. Repeat constantly until any semblance to the original working copy is destroyed and all their dedicated beta (alpha/cvs) users are alienated to the point of not even using the "stable" (beta) E release.
That said, the Enlightenment team has turned out some amazing work (imlib2, etc.), and it's a shame to see the recycling destruction that takes place. If they were to be lest "artistic" and concentrate more on getting something working for the masses "out the door", E would still be an incredible and highly-advanced wm. We'd likely also have a slew of 3rd party apps built with imlib2 (et al), all on top of technology which would blow away gtk and qt. It's really too bad nobody forked the project and took what was good from E as they went along to create something perminant.
Re:fame? (Score:2)
Enlightenment support (Score:5, Insightful)
I worked with e-team member Kim Woelders on the problem and he produced a couple of patches after I sent him some good reproducible test cases. We exchanged a total of 39 email messages and it was finally fixed. I'd usually have a patch within 24 hours of sending him a test case.
All of that while they are busy trying to get e17 out. The work that the team does is amazing and I am very grateful.
To say that I am a fan is an understatement!
Re:Enlightenment support (Score:3, Funny)
They were always trying to get e17 out.
my favorite part... (Score:4, Interesting)
About --> Enlightenment...
...and a dialog box pops up that says "version 0.16.999.001". I've never used E, so maybe the version number isn't funny in Rasterman's world...but it's funny in mine.
flames will abound (Score:2, Interesting)
but this is why i switched to mac os x. one, i had the cash to drop on a powerbook. and two, i love the beautification that apple decided to do to the desktop.
when i use linux i use enlightenment because of the same reason. when it comes down to it, i surf, read email, listen to music, and use terminals to connect to the boxes i work on. so any OS will do.
that given, i want my sh!t to look good. i want my apps to work happily together like the brady bunch. and they should look better than than the
Where's the usability? (Score:3, Insightful)
For what I've seen the window manager "experience" is far away from something pleasable, after the Wow factor is over. I've never been a fan of wallpaper drop-down menus, in WM nor in other "1st generation" window managers (those that have been on Linux for a long, long time without major usability revisions). Just how many times does he open a two level menu just to check/uncheck the gadgets "edit" mode?
Also I remember that the E desktop had to be configured through hand-editing the text files. Although they promise that "It will provide nicely integrated GUI elements for managing your desktop elements, both files and windows", if this elements are as annoying to use as the dropdown menu then the environment will not have a good workflow.
It's great to have a wonderful platform to build upon. But until something that I can use is actually built, I'm not downloading this.
Re:Where's the usability? (Score:2)
Re:Where's the usability? (Score:2)
And that's why I'm not using it, and why it's a different beast than the promised next generation graphic engines of G'n'K. Those i will use when/if they are sometime ready, because I want an integrated desktop environment more than I want a beautiful bells and whistles presentation. I already can use Flash for that, thanks.
Re:Where's the usability? (Score:2)
torrents? (Score:2)
the circle is complete (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:the circle is complete (Score:4, Insightful)
While you're cloning Quartz/Aqua, how about Cocoa? (Score:3, Insightful)
What about starting from an API that's already got OpenGL bindings and acceleration, and using GNUstep instead of inventing a new library?
Someone put up the funding to buy Rasterman a (Score:2)
...copy of Fred Brooks' The Mythical Man-Month so he can figure out why the code he wrote years ago isn't being used.
Hint: Get the payroll sheet of an established software product company. Count up the number of programmers on the sheet. Also ask the programmers how much of their time is spent typing code. Put your findings into the context of the overall company. Solve for X.
Correct me if Im wrong (Score:2)
Re:Correct me if Im wrong (Score:2)
Ignorant questions (Score:3, Interesting)
I think the problem with X is not features, and libraries on top of it, but rather that the basic core concept in an X display is a bitmap.
The problems with this are: slow communications, and lack of scalability on different displays. The classic cure for this was display Postscript, which had problems of A. Copyright, B. Bloat, C. Large blocks files of code to do small things, D. Arcane syntax.
There has to be a better way. But what I'm seeing here is all applications and libraries for use by applications on top of the bitmap based rendering. There are some things mentioned which I recall being replacements for this engine, but certainly Enlightentment DR17 is all on top of the X bitmap system, right?
Any movement on chucking that in favor of a bitmap independant system?
mirrors of demo videos (Score:2)
here [mirrordot.com] and here [mirrordot.com]
Does anyone know whether there are actual DR17 packages downloadable other than building it CVS?
the cathedral and the bazaar (Score:5, Insightful)
I've always liked the Enlightenment project, and I try to keep up-to-date with what's going on (which is not easy), but it seems pretty clear to me that it will not be the future of the Linux desktop.
E is not really a valid option for the OSS world - I wouldn't be surprised if more people were using XFce or Rox than E at this point. Sure, Linux itself has proven that if something new and amazing comes around and blows everything away by a large margin it may have a *hope* of shifting the momentum, but as great as E is, I doubt it is that impressive.
The reason why the framework Seth+Havoc describe will win over the E stack is because it is integrative, whereas E is not. When the next-generation X rendering system is in place, it will be available to everyone who uses those extensions. Probably by the time Damage + Composite are enabled by default on X, the latest KDE + gnome desktops will have support for them. And all the applications in those respective desktops will quickly (if not instantly) gain those advantages. Remember when the same thing happened with anti-aliased fonts a few years ago?
Yes, you can get the E magic right now, but you have to go through E. As long as they remain the sole gatekeepers, you can expect them to have the same extremely limited influence they have now. At this point in the game, I seriously doubt they can beat the inertia from the other desktops. Honestly, if you're developing a new application, are you going to develop for the mature and distributed kde or gnome desktop environments, or will you use E, which is available now with some ephemeral advantages but some serious disadvantages?
It's also true that by using E you're not committed to using _only_ E, but then, what's the point? If you use E + some random GTK application, you're not going to get the consistent graphical features until GTK itself gets those features... but at that point all gnome applications will have them.
The example of the Cathedral and the Bazaar is a good metaphor for these differing stacks. It seems to me the E project has always been fiercly exclusive in the way it does things - the whole Enlightenment Foundation Libraries are the best example of reinventing the wheel with E technologies. But the cost they've paid is limited deployment, slower releases, less interest and a rather narrow development strategy. Certainly that may suite some people fine. However, with that in mind I don't know how reasonable it is for Raster to be calling sour grapes.
He's right, but... (Score:2)
eye candy isn't the main purpose of a desktop (Score:3, Informative)
Also, people should remember that neither Apple nor Rasterman invented features such as the use of translucency, blurring, shadows, etc.--they go back many years in the academic literature as visual clues.
Furthermore, support for translucency itself has been discussed in the X community pretty much since the day X11 was released, and the reason for not adding it has been a high cost/benefit ratio. It's only now that hardware has gotten cheap and good enough that many people can use this, and that toolkits are starting to use it, and that people have the software engineering side under control that people are getting around to adding this feature to X11. From a practical point of view, that's probably about the right time.
Re:No Funding (Score:4, Insightful)
There are plenty of organizations that sponsor open source development as well as several large companies that hire and pay people exclusively to write open source code.
My employer is one of them. (Starts with 'Red', ends with 'Hat')
Re:No Funding (Score:3, Funny)
Can't we have some more hints on whats in between the two ?
Re:No Funding (Score:3, Informative)
One of them was that North Carolina just sucks, which is why we now have an office in Westford, MA.
Re:No Funding (Score:3, Insightful)
Hello? Free software != software for no money. Free software == software without restrictions.
Re:No Funding (Score:2)
I could make my code open source by including it in packages users have purchased from me. That way the code is open, the software is unrestricted, and I get paid for it.
Re:No Funding (Score:3, Insightful)
Which is as it should be, instead of insisting that people give you money for something which can be copied for pennies.
Re:No Funding (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:No Funding (Score:5, Informative)
It only sounds resentful if you are looking for resentment. It is a simple matter of fact -- he could not afford it as he and his project are not funded.
Another fact: his lack of funding is contrasted by the fact that others, who are only now investingating issues he has already implemented are well funded.
It is what it is -- factual. So keep your "you got what you asked for" attitude to yourself, thank-you very much.
Re:No Funding (Score:5, Insightful)
If you choose to write open source code, you are chosing to have no money. That's your choice. But dont complain about it.
Open source is not an end itself. With some celebrity exceptions, open source exists because someone solved a problem--often a business problem--and released the solution to the public.
Why would they give it away? Because they have no interest in trying to sell it. Selling shrinkwrap software is a tough business, most people would rather focus on whatever it is they're better at. They stand to gain much more by open sourcing it than they would keeping it in a vault, or trying to sell it.
Re:No Funding (Score:3, Insightful)
1. My employer funds my trips to free software conferences. So do many other people's employers.
2. I write open source code, and I have money. Not wealth beyond the dreams of avarice, but more than most people I know.
It seems that you're focused on the value of a single co
Re:Talk is cheap (Score:5, Insightful)
I can see where he is coming from, but for all the hype the E team generate over their amazing new libraries, how many apps actually use them? As far as I can tell, basically none. I don't know why that is though.
Re:Talk is cheap (Score:5, Interesting)
The OSS GUI world is so deeply rooted in Qt/KDE and GTK+/Gnome that there's no chance at *all* that people will adopt his APIs for the next gen display system.
Red Hat's people are concerned with achieving this kind of stuff without too deeply breaking source compatibility. If they can pull that off, my hat's off to them.
That said, red hat's people can learn a *lot* by working with Raster. Clearly, his code is fast, and his technical design's good. But the model is likely inapplicable to traditional widget toolkits.
Re:Talk is cheap (Score:2)
Re:Talk is cheap (Score:5, Interesting)
Yesterday, just for the sake of it, i emerged (installed on Gentoo) Evidence, e17's to-be file manager. I was hoping to get a glimpse of the e's login manager (Entrance), but for some reason i typed Evidence. It looks great, and even silly things like clicking on an icon and see it zooming transparently in the background makes you see what these guys can do with e's core libraries. Rasterman is right, what the X team is talking about as "next gen rendering", they can do now. He's well entitled to want to make it public.
And yes, one has to give kudos to Rasterman and the whole e17 team for that matter. They are putting a lot of work into e17, and it shows. I just hope they just finish it someday
Re:Okay.. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Okay.. (Score:5, Informative)
Let's see here...
The effects usually look professional, but they run slow and inefficiently
Evas is up to 150 times faster than XRender in plain software mode (with no hardware acceleration) at rendering images. In fact, we often prefer running in software mode than in GL mode because it's more stable and often works better. This is the wrongest statement I've ever heard in my life. Have you ever seen Engage? It does the OSX docker effect absolutely smoothly even on a relatively slow CPU and the crappiest of video cards. That complex, multi-layered animated background you see in the video runs on my system smoothly while taking less than 40% CPU
However, enlightenment is way too layered and has a million different little components... I just personally think it could all be implemented better.
So you think it would be better if we had one big monolithic, inflexible library that was full of bugs? Or you're one of those people who think that somehow the EFL is slower because it's componentized -- even though it beats the crap out of anything comparable that exists performance-wise? How does "consolidated" translate into "scalable", anyway, Mr. professor of software engineering?
This technology is there, it has been carefully thought out, solidly and cleanly implemented. Go take a look at the code/API yourself before you begin to comment. It is usable NOW, and you don't need to wait until E17 is released before you can use it. None of those things you see in the videos are simulated, that is presently working software available to anyone who wants to install it.
Re:Okay.. (Score:4, Informative)
IMHO you guys could do a lot for the E project by having an rsyncable nightly build tree for Linux/x86, so it's trivial to try the latest code. That way you'd get more testers as well.