tycho61uk, on Jul 5 2005, 12:16 AM, said:
That's very true! But I'd wager it was hogging the CPU and running under OS8.x or 9. OSX requires a VAST amount of CPU time and memory for all it's magical effects, and it won't let single applications hog the CPU. And that's before we add the cost of on-the-fly code translation and the memory that Rosetta will undoubtedly gobble-up.
This is the age of bloatware people
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Also wrong. Mac OS X allows any process as much CPU time as it can give. If you're running no background services (like filesharing), and no other applications are doing anything, Mac OS X will give nearly 100% CPU to whatever process needs it. In my case, I've seen my copy of LightWave 7.5 chew up nearly 193% of my total CPU of 200% (dual-proc G4). It couldn't use any more than that, due to inherent inefficiencies in splitting a task across multiple execution units. A small percentage of the rest of the CPU was used for IO and system tasks.
Remember that Mac OS X on Intel will be native!! In fact, it already is! Rosetta won't need to touch Mac OS X, since it's all already Intel code. All it needs to look at is Nova. Assuming a 3GHz P4 (which is not unreasonable), and assuming that Rosetta runs three times slower than an equivalent set of native "Carbon for Intel" code, that'll still mean Nova will be running on a 1GHz P4. Sorry, mate, but that's more than enough to run Nova, and run it comfortably.
Even if Rosetta turns out to be gluggy as hell, and I mean ultra gluggy, it'll still be fine. I mean, let's say that our 3GHz P4 is reduced to a 300MHz one, equivalent speed. That's a ten-fold speed decrease, something I find highly unlikely. Well, Nova runs perfectly well on a 233MHz G3 Rev B iMac.
I think we'll be fine.
Sorry for ranting, but I hate disinformation.
Dave @ ATMOS