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Re: [osol-discuss] OpenSolaris graphics performance in Java 2D Microbenchma: msg#00834

opensolaris-discuss

Subject: Re: [osol-discuss] OpenSolaris graphics performance in Java 2D Microbenchmark beats Linux!!!

A few days ago, I upgraded one of my PCs at home to an AMD Quad, and I have
noticed a similar surprise in performance differences between OpenSolaris and
various Linux distros. (I have no intent of going back to OpenSolaris at least
for a while; the reason I did this was because I was unable to install Ubuntu
Jaunty from an external CD drive and a 2009.06 LiveCD happened to be nearby.)

Of course, I am talking about a totally different issue here--this was about
the (reputedly superior) scalability of Solaris as a whole rather than about a
particular video driver. (And I am very curious as to how Solaris benchmarks
against RedHat on the new six-core AMD Istanbul--or SunFire X4640.)

However, getting back to the original thread, the inability of Linux to allow
proprietary drivers to be included in the kernel can IMO create great
inconveniences.

As I am sure many here are aware, nowadays, chipsets are so complex that they,
just like today's software code, will, unfortunately and inenvitably, contain
bugs, many of them not yet identified.

As a common practice, drivers are written by chipset designers deliberatly to
circumvent those bugs (which typically will not be published). When some of
those bugs are identified and removed, drivers written strictly according to
the specs may no longer work. This may explain why Ubuntu Remix, which works
flawlessly on the Acer Aspire One netbooks, suddenly has no wi-fi on the newest
models although supposedly the same Atheros chipset is used.

This leads me to a much bigger issue.

Chairman Larry made a big fuss that he wanted to see an alternative to Android
on netbooks. I have not seen many discussions on this. However, for pretty
much the same reason as I mentioned above, Android may go the same way as Linux
did--no netbook manufacturers now are taking it seriously. Perhaps Chairman
Larry's idea should be given a serious thought--perhaps an authentic Java plus
a scaled-down OpenSolaris should be the way to go?

We are not talking about just the netbook market (which is expected to reach 30
million units this year), but also AMD's upcoming traditional notebooks which
are thin, light-weight, and low-power-consumption, and will cost not much more
than the netbooks.
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