For a long time now, GNU/Linux distributions have been criticised by desktop and laptop users for starting up too slowly. More recently, within the Fedora community particularly, there have been increasing numbers of complaints about the amount of ‘flicker’ that happens as the system switches from Grub to RHGB to GDM, etc. Fedora 10 is going to change all of that, and to talk us through this feature, Adam Jackson, Red Hat Desktop Engineer, agreed to an interview.
This is all great.
The fat X cursor was almost a trademark of XFree/Xorg
thanks red hat to support linux
if we had waiting ubuntu to do this, surely that would take 15 years…
Actually, we had to wait another -2 years
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upstart
thanks to Ubuntu to have created that…
but you should code more…
Unfortunately Upstart is still used to boot the system in the same way sysvinit did (no event-based startup used in neither Fedora or Ubuntu).
I actually never have heard people complaining about such problems.
And even if so. It only happens once….?
Yes, I haven’t heard anyone complaining, especially about desktop machines. The start up with Ubuntu is so much quicker than Windows that I can’t imagine complaining.
Editing out test…wish we could delete.
Edited 2008-10-27 17:12 UTC
Regardless if you want a fancy boot or not: IMHO it is the right thing to give the kernel control about the graphics mode. There are many advantages of this and also of graphics memory organization inside the kernel.
Fedora as a major Linux distribution is heavily pushing this. It helps to push further development in that area, for example support for other graphics hardware as well, perhaps even directly by nvidia. This is much more important than the fancy boot itself.
Edited 2008-10-27 20:08 UTC