
"What Intel giveth, Microsoft taketh away. Such has been the conventional wisdom surrounding the Windows/Intel (aka Wintel) duopoly since the early days of Windows 95. In practical terms, it means that performance advancements on the hardware side are quickly consumed by the ever-increasing complexity of the Windows/Office code base. Case in point: Microsoft Office 2007, which, when deployed on Windows Vista, consumes more than 12 times as much memory and nearly three times as much processing power as the version that graced PCs just seven short years ago, Office 2000. Despite years of real-world experience with both sides of the duopoly, few organizations have taken the time to directly quantify what my colleagues and I at Intel used to call The Great Moore's Law Compensator (TGMLC). In fact, the hard numbers above represent what is perhaps the first-ever attempt to accurately measure the evolution of the Windows/Office platform in terms of real-world hardware system requirements and resource consumption. In this article I hope to further
quantify the impact of TGMLC and to track its effects across four distinct generations of Microsoft's desktop computing software stack."
Member since:
2007-12-27
Talking here from a fresh install of SMGL with Gnome 2.22 and Firefox 2, currently the entire system is clocking in at 197MB of used memory. But then this isn't any ordinary system, all software was compiled and optimized correctly for my system.
The same setup on Ubuntu would use about 400MB, and my other computer with Paldo Linux starts up with about 300MB used (with Firefox).
If distros wanted to/had time to, they could optimize their releases a lot better.
Edit: I should also mention that the SMGL install in blazingly fast.
Edited 2008-04-16 00:06 UTC