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I am not saying that the usage of Aero is reasonable, I agree it is quite the opposite, but that is what Microsoft chose to let Aero actually use. I have no idea why, but they have to do SOMETHING to have people buy new machines and since the cpu's do not get faster anymore, they had to move to something else that did, and be hogs in the process too. In other words, deliberately bloated.I do not agree with this conclusion. The single largest reason forYou may not agree with my conclusion, but I don't agree with yours,
large amounts of memory being needed for a Windows machine is the
graphics module which the IBM i doesn't have. Just see how much more
the Aero capability for Vista/7 requires in terms of computer power (but
it is nice).
either. There's simply no reason for graphics to require a gigabyte of
memory. My PS3 has graphics that are as good as Windows and yet only
requires 256MB of memory. If you're saying that the graphics engine on
Windows is the main driver behind the gigabyte requirement then that's
some horribly bloated code.
As you may know I live in Denmark (same height as New Foundland), where the Copenhagen climate summit on Global Warming was caught in a blizzard a year ago and we have had two months of similar winter now, so these days it is a bit hard to see. I believe you though :)"appears"?? Heeeee! Yes, and the Sun appears to be hot, doesn't it? :)So, yes, other operating systems have shared code. But like so manyI agree that the i appears to be very efficient in how things work.
things, the i has had it for a much longer time. The IBM i - we have
technology before technology is cool<smile>.
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