On Thursday 20 December 2007 01:45:54 pm Gary Baribault wrote:
OK, here's the issue: you're not "most people". I'm not most people. All of us subscribed to this mailing list are probably not most people. And most people don't name their files orderly, and put them in logical places. I've seen people who write something about a project about the Civil War and name it "project.doc". I would name it "Civil War Project.odt", and that person put the file in their My Pictures folder because that's where the Save dialog box is open to. They are the people who would benefit most from Beagle, and that's also about 90% of the computing population, so if openSUSE wants to reach that 90%, it a good idea to have Beagle installed by default and turned on.
Unless of course that solution destroys the performance on the target system. I am the one who started this thread, and as I stated at the beginning, I have a dual core Turion L52 64bit processor, 1.5Gigs of memory and a 7200 RPM Sata drive, and the performance went out the door. Other than a large MBox in my Thunderbird, I don't have that much data to index, and Beagle took 700Meg or RAM and 1Gig of SWAP, niced or not, that causes a lot of swapping.
Hi Gary, what version of SUSE, Beagle, Mono is installed on your computer. I don't see problems with beagle. Top shows that: beagle-helper runs with nice 19 and priority 39 beagled runs with nice 7 and priority 22 both nice values are lower than normal applications. Priority number someone has to explain. So far I recall, the discussion about ionice was already topic. I would really like to see some beagle developer, like Joe Shaw to explain and help again. -- Regards, Rajko -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org