When installed these packages provide additional
functionality in TDE:
Looking at those packages that provide additional functionality raises an interesting
question: before building TDE, could those related packages be removed to build a TDE
Light? That is, create a special build environment to build TDE Light?
I tinker with old hardware. TDE is --- well --- sluggish on a PI and PII machine. Without
those many hooks would TDE be snappier?
Those older machines lack the hardware muscle to support modern expectations of video and
graphics support. Therefore when building for older hardware, why build TDE with that
support and those hooks? If TDE is built without that support is there anything to gain on
older hardware? Just curious --- I don't know the answer.
Those older machines were expected to be office machines, not home theater PCs. Why
can't they still fulfill that role?
I would like to see a discussion about what a TDE Light might entail or provide. Is a TDE
Light feasible? Doable? What are the technical challenges?
If I had appropriate information I would create a special build environment and give TDE
Light a test.
Should anybody say that building TDE for such hardware is unreasonable, I counter with a
simple question. Why is NT4, a 32-bit operating system, so snappy on such hardware? To
follow: Why can't a Linux based OS with TDE be just as snappy? Or, to put a
*mischievous* twist to the question: what did the Microsoft devs do right that the
free/libre software devs did wrong? :)
I have NT4 installed on both my PI and PII machines (dual boot). NT4 just hums. Apps open
quickly. There is no lag. Granted, I don't surf the web with those machines or play
videos, but everything else is a pleasure to use.
Oh, I have WFWG 3.11 with the Norton Desktop still installed on the first 512 MB partition
of the PI hard drive. A 16-bit OS on 32-bit hardware. Oh. My. Gosh. Fast. :) ;)
Is there any hope to the idea of a TDE Light?
Darrell