ex2bot
Registered Bot
Tombo:
Mac OS X's video system pumps out MUCH more complex stuff than 9's. That causes a perception of sluggishness. Of course, your 1 gHz iMac shouldn't feel nearly as sluggish because it is capable of using Quartz GL (or Quartz Extreme-stupid name) window acceleration.
But, as symphonix (and maybe others) mentioned, you _need_to_ buy_as_ much_ RAM_as_you_ can_afford. I still have 256 meg on my iMac, and causes performance hits as more and more complex programs are opened.
Once you get more RAM, leave your most often used programs running ALL the time (exception: Don't leave Classic programs running all the time). OS X is very efficient at managaing virtual memory. You won't have to wait as long when you want to use your programs.
I leave TextEdit, iTunes, Preview, System Prefs, Safari, and Entourage open almost all the time. If another program needs some of their memory, the system moves them to the swap file efficiently. I don't have to wait as long for the programs to load off the hard drive.
Mac OS X's video system pumps out MUCH more complex stuff than 9's. That causes a perception of sluggishness. Of course, your 1 gHz iMac shouldn't feel nearly as sluggish because it is capable of using Quartz GL (or Quartz Extreme-stupid name) window acceleration.
But, as symphonix (and maybe others) mentioned, you _need_to_ buy_as_ much_ RAM_as_you_ can_afford. I still have 256 meg on my iMac, and causes performance hits as more and more complex programs are opened.
Once you get more RAM, leave your most often used programs running ALL the time (exception: Don't leave Classic programs running all the time). OS X is very efficient at managaing virtual memory. You won't have to wait as long when you want to use your programs.
I leave TextEdit, iTunes, Preview, System Prefs, Safari, and Entourage open almost all the time. If another program needs some of their memory, the system moves them to the swap file efficiently. I don't have to wait as long for the programs to load off the hard drive.