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Date:      Wed, 06 Mar 2002 00:07:32 +1000
From:      Stephen McKay <mckay@thehub.com.au>
To:        "Matthew D. Fuller" <fullermd@over-yonder.net>
Cc:        chat@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Taming Netscape Navigator? 
Message-ID:  <200203051407.g25E7WF10805@dungeon.home>
In-Reply-To: <20020301201318.C3880@over-yonder.net> from "Matthew D. Fuller" at "Sat, 02 Mar 2002 02:13:18 %2B0000"
References:  <Pine.LNX.4.43.0203011634360.2796-100000@pilchuck.reedmedia.net> <3C7FB956.18428.510B414@localhost> <20020301201318.C3880@over-yonder.net>

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On Saturday, 2nd March 2002, "Matthew D. Fuller" wrote:

>Opera is nifty.  Pretty clean, reasonably efficient.  The stupid
>all-windows-in-one UI must die a fiery death though.  It works great if
>you've got 2 or 3 open.  It's useless when you get more than 5 or 6, both
>because it becomes impossible to find the one you want quickly, and
>because Opera gets draggingly slow as you open more.  Opera 6.x is even
>SLOWER, and non-trivially buggier, so I'm stuck on 5.

How interesting!  As soon as I saw Opera's tabbed interface, I was sold.

The few times since then that I've had to use Netscape with its one-page-
per-window scheme have been tediously painful.  I can't imagine going back.
With Netscape I could usefully open maybe 30 windows, and I would lose
them in the clutter.  With Opera, I can open about 100 or so.  After that,
it gets a bit slow, but with a fast Athlon and half a gig of ram, it's fine.
Oh, and I use 5.0, not the buggy 6.0 alpha test demos they've released.
If you are careful not to do a few particular things, the uptime of opera
is a month, perhaps 2 months.  Enough to suffice.

The thing I really need now is a good HTML filter to remove some of
the more repulsive web garbage (popup windows, flashing fonts, scrolling
messages in the status bar, target="new" on links, etc).  Just never quite
get around to writing one.

Now, about your assertion that dual CPUs are more wonderful than wonderful,
consider the effect of adding a cpu usage limiting scheduler that caused
processes that were using 50% or more of the cpu to sleep 1 clock tick out
of 2.  Wouldn't that be just like two cpus at half the speed?  Doesn't that
mean I could fake up a dual 700 from my Athlon 1400 for little more than
a bit of kernel hackery?  Maybe your dual PPRO really is obsolete. :-)

Stephen.

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