Disable Live resizing

mikejuni

Registered
Anyone knows how to disable the live resizing in Mac OS X. I'd rather see a
smooth outline resizing then a sloggy live resizing.
 
Get a better graphics card. I just bought a ATI Radeon AGP 32MB. Absolutely no problem with live resizing. :cool:
 
Get a better Mac too. I got the GeForce 3 and i have no problems. What with my 64Mb of DDRRAM, and 867MHz G4 CPU?!!!

No, I have your sympathy. There are quite a few little things Apple have thrown into Aqua that some don't want duw to older systems. But try posting a request in the more tech parts of this forum.

Happy hunting.
 
I don't know about what you guys did, but I don't think that getting a better graphics card will help with live resizing. The reason is that Mac OS X does NOT offload any of the calculations to the graphics card.. the CPU handles it all... I think they are working on tha for Mac OS X 10.2.

So please tell me, did you guys REALLY see a performance boost when you got a new graphics card, or did you just get a new graphics card with a new computer? If you got it with a new computer, chances are its the faster processor, more cache, and faster system bus that made live resizing faster.

Also, I'd like to know how to disable live resizing too, just for knowledge purposes. And as the last poster said, getting a new graphics card isn't the solution, because some of us don't have the money to spend on it.
 
Originally posted by simX
I don't know about what you guys did, but I don't think that getting a better graphics card will help with live resizing. The reason is that Mac OS X does NOT offload any of the calculations to the graphics card.. the CPU handles it all... I think they are working on tha for Mac OS X 10.2.
I don't know what you're talking about. I saw an INCREDIBLE boost in performance graphics-wise, going from 10.0.4 to 10.1. The fact is, there are now native drivers for most, if not all, of the graphics cards that came w/ G3/G4 machines. Granted, some drivers are better than others (GeForce 2/3 esp. better!) but many of the calcs (from what I've read) are offloaded, that was one of the technical highlights of the upgrade to 10.1.
 
actually, I don't know y everybody should buy a new graphics card just to have acceptable window rezising speeds.
An option to switch between live and border resizing would also fix that problem, and b a lot cheaper though.
Besides, iMac users can't upgrade to a new graphics card...
 
Yes, let us custumize more. Not just what theme to use, wether or not to use aqua is more what im interested in since im on a iMac rev with 160 mb RAM.
I couldnt use 10.0.4. I cant use 10.1. It is just to slow. I guess all of you with nice G4:s are having really fun with the new nice OS. What about us with the old iMacs?
Apple hold 5% of the "computer market", right? I think it would be good if Apple tried to please at least the whole 5%.
Two thumbs down.
 
I was actually joking about the new Mac and GPU. I was taking the piss out of dillerx. In my opinion, it's ludicrous to ask someone to buy a new computer just to get a quicker finder.

The ? and 3 ! were a clue that I was being ironic and quirky. Sorry I'm english. I'll be a little more careful with my humour for my American cousins.

I am very aware that teh CPU takes control of everything but FPU intenscive calculations, ie games, 3d apps, etc. Anyway. My advice for mikejuni, is get more RAM if you can, but also wait for 10.2 and further releases as they (Apple) will get better.
 
sebastiant,
Try putting more RAM in your iMac. That will give you significantly better performance.
I have a non-DV slot-loading iMac, 350Mhz G3 chip. When I installed OS X back in March, I had 128MB of RAM. Within weeks, I upgraded to 320MB. BIG improvement in speed and stability! And a little while back, I couldn't resist adding a 512MB stick that was selling for $52, so now I have a total of 768MB of RAM on board.
:D
 
As far as I know, there is no way to disable live window resizing. In fact, I am almost positive that Cocoa applications can ONLY have live window resizing because that is how the window object code is set up for Cocoa from the start (and this goes back to NeXT, which had lie window resizing way back when).

I really haven't seen how bad your resizing is, but I have little problem with mine. Certainly, it is application dependent, but the window is just a split second behind my cursor in any given situation. It is such a minuscule amount of time that when I resize, that i just click and drag to the spot I want and by the time I am actually ready to let go, the window has caught up with my cursor.

To be honest, I really see no difference to the lag in OS 9<'s outline model. As you drag, you see an outline, but it doesn't actually draw the window until you let go, so often I am forced to resize and resize again because I don't know what the window will actually look like until I let go. With OS X, I can see the window's contents as I drag, and it is only just tenths of a second behind my adjustments.

One man's trash is another man's treasure.
 
Yeah just to add ot that note about programs using outline resizing..The crappy beat of AIm we've bene stuck with for sometime now (God dammit we need an update:( ) uses outlines for resizing it's windows..though truthfully it takes a whiel for it to redraw once you do resize. I'm sure that that's merely a function of the code being untouched for several months now...
 
I have already have a new iBook with 640Mb RAM.

How can I replace a graphic card? A joke.
Stop replying useless suggestions. Don't tell me to improve my hardware in order to make resizing a little less sloppy.

Now I know that this feature don't exists. Maybe I'll tell Apple
to implement this in the near future.

By the way, I fully supports Mac OS X. I am previously a PC owner (4 machines). But now I am using OSX all day long. It is really a
developer/designer's dream OS in a very good hardware.

Keep going Apple!!!
 
Originally posted by mikejuni
...
Stop replying useless suggestions. Don't tell me to improve my hardware in order to make resizing a little less sloppy.

...

Simmer brother... We're all just playing around a little. We always joke with eachother and solutions and helpful hiints always result after the pokes and giggles. :)
 
Outline resizing only works for carbon/classic applications (except ie, which uses its own functions for live resizing; thats y it is so slow there i guess :D )

Cocoa apps all use live window resizing. But I think it should b possible to make outline resizing available for cocoa apps, too.
 
Originally posted by sheepguy42

I don't know what you're talking about. I saw an INCREDIBLE boost in performance graphics-wise, going from 10.0.4 to 10.1. The fact is, there are now native drivers for most, if not all, of the graphics cards that came w/ G3/G4 machines. Granted, some drivers are better than others (GeForce 2/3 esp. better!) but many of the calcs (from what I've read) are offloaded, that was one of the technical highlights of the upgrade to 10.1.

Did you not listen to what I said? :rolleyes: I said upgrading your GRAPHICS CARD will not improve live resizing. Upgrading the OPERATING SYSTEM will, obviously, improve live resizing -- but only because of major optimization , not offloading to the GPU -- if you go to www.apple.com/macosx/newversion , it says stuff about optimization, not offloading to the GPU. That was my point. So whether the post about getting a new GPU was meant to be a joke or not, it still wouldn't have helped, so the joke is dumb anyway. ;)
 
genghiscohen:
I promise you. I cant afford to add more RAM (or anything) to my mac.

Seriously, what is Apple thinking?
Of course... They run the company they got all the facts and they know what is best. But this just feels very stupid.
If you look at their website, apple.com/macosx, they write alot about how fantastic and just plain perfect Mac OS X is. But what they forgot to say is that if your computer is not new enough, it will annoy the shit out of you, cause it feels really sluggish and everything that you normally gets done in a second you now get to wait 30 seconds for.
Let us get rid of all the fancy stuff. All that doesnt mather. All that will, if turned off, speed up your system.
 
What machine do you have where you cannot afford 30$ to put a 256MB DIMM in that thing? I added 256MB to get 352MB into my 8600 and MacOS X 10.0.4 was much more acceptable to me, and 10.1 is pretty good. I think some people have to get over the fact that X will NEVER be as fast as 9. All that fancy stuff doesn't even really have an impact on speed (most of the time, the shrinking effects/etc. do have a good impact on speed).

Since X is pre-emptively multitasked, there is NO WAY for an app to hog 100% of the CPU. This leads to the fact of it feeling a little more sluggish than before, especially when you have quite a few processes actively running.

Now on the topic of stuff being unloaded onto the GPU I can say this: YES IT IS! I am currently writing Voodoo drivers for X and I can say that if you EVER BOTHER to look at the source for Darwin, there is quite a bit of stuff being unloaded. However, there are certain things that cannot be unloaded EASILY. One of these is live resizing. This is because the GPU needs the pixels for the newly uncovered regions. This means MacOS X has to call the app to get the pixels, and the pass those pixels to the GPU. This takes time, and with all these high-res monitors, it REALLY chugs time. Pixel pushing usually takes 50% of any graphics operation, and live resizing requires a lot of it. Window moving is easier since you can push the revealed pixels onto the card, and have the card blit the window to the new location (screen->screen blits take only the time required to tell the card the operation) rather than push a whole new window pixmap onto the card.

I have run Linux with V3 acceleration in XWin, and have the sluggishness with live resizing that every other iMac user complains about. Everything else is okay but live resizing. The sluggishness IS NOT NEW.

Heck, the GForce 3, and the Rage Pro series of cards finally got ANY SORT OF 2D/3D acceleration support in 10.1 and there are still are non-ATi/NVidia cards that don't have driver support.

The only reason why G4 users get good resizing is because of the fact that vector units like Altivec make live resizing a more realistic possibility. Linux on a PC with MMX or any other vector unit gets decent live resizing, but since G3s and earlier don't have a vector unit, it is difficult to push so many pixels around.

No offense to anyone, just clearing the smoke.
 
Krevinek,
I'm running an 8600 with a G3 upgrade card. What other tips do you have for improving performance, because I find it unbearably slow compared to my G4 under 10.1. Thanks
 
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