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Date:      Fri, 5 Mar 2004 15:51:22 +0200 (EET)
From:      Narvi <narvi@haldjas.folklore.ee>
To:        Daniela <dgw@liwest.at>
Cc:        freebsd-advocacy@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: FreeBSD Most wanted
Message-ID:  <20040305155015.Y38020@haldjas.folklore.ee>
In-Reply-To: <200403050615.55106.dgw@liwest.at>
References:  <Pine.LNX.4.43.0403011839470.3269-100000@pilchuck.reedmedia.net> <200403041513.00003.DavidJohnson@Siemens.com> <200403050615.55106.dgw@liwest.at>

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On Fri, 5 Mar 2004, Daniela wrote:

> On Thursday 04 March 2004 23:12, Johnson David wrote:
> > On Thursday 04 March 2004 02:40 pm, Daniela wrote:
> > > Cross platform applications are slower than apps that are optimized
> > > for one particular platform. I know what I'm speaking of. What are
> > > the extended features of a platform good for, when you can't use them
> > > because another platform doesn't have them?
> >
> > Not necessarily true. You won't be able to perform any platform specific
> > optimizations, but in general cross platform code is not any slower
> > than platform specific code. Three examples: NetBSD, Linux kernel, Qt.
> > Neither NetBSD nor Linux are considered "slow" by any stretch of the
> > imagination. Qt is impresively fast, and is only called "sluggish" by
> > biased trolls.
>
> I'm not speaking of your average code, I'm speaking of high-speed assembly
> language programs.
>

and how many millions of lines of that have you written and maintained?
Are you sure it would not be faster if it was re-written in C and compiled
?

> Daniela
>



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