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Well, since the 8610 lacks 3D acceleration (and *also lacks 2D acceleration* AFAIK, which could have a big impact in GUI's, etc), it has to drive *all* graphics by processor, right? At the expense of computing power for *the applications*, right?
Actually it looks fairly promising. You have to realise that in modern GUIs, not much of the display is updated. In the demo you see it booting into GNOME and it's no slower than my experience with a Pegasos with a Radeon 9250. It's almost guaranteed that the Fedora build installed on it does not have any Altivec enabled where it could be (there are lots of parts of GNOME and X which are running on the Cairo or Pixman engines, along with Firefox and Openoffice of course, which Luca sent patches for a couple months back).
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I'd like to see some "demo" of the 8610 (alone, no GFX HW) running a couple of apps simultaneously while providing a true, modern desktop environment that's flawless.
Peter? What are your experiences on the DIU?
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Go for the 8640!
Right now we're concentrating on the Netbook market, and we're thinking of how much web browsing, emailing and general internet usage you can do with it. Office apps, simple gaming, and enough "HD" video playback to fill your screen, is enough. We already think the MPC8610 is going to kick the backside of comparable Intel Atom processors (in power AND performance) and remember, Linux is not as optimized for PPC as it is for Intel. So it can only IMPROVE..
And in the end, the less acceleration offered by the board, the more you guys will have to start coding AltiVec enhancements.. I think it works to better the platform and to get EVERY improvement out of it, if you are given something which needs a little help to perform.
That said, decoding 4 nearly-DVD-resolution videos at once, moving them around while being blended - I think that's a good result. I don't think you'll have too much of a problem (certainly, using fbdev on a Radeon 9250 is not a terrible experience, especially in limited resolutions like 1024xsomething)