“Taking a break from our graphics excitement last week with the release of AMD’s 8.42.3 Display Driver, we have finished our largest (and most time consuming) Linux performance comparison to date. We have taken the last 12 major kernel releases, from Linux 2.6.12 to Linux 2.6.23, built them from source and set out on a benchmarking escapade. This testing also includes the Linux 2.6.24-rc1 kernel. From these benchmarks you can see how the Linux kernel performance has matured over the past two and a half years.”Here is some more Tech News from around the web:
- The Semantic Web Going Mainstream @ Slashdot
- Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard: the Ars Technica review
- HDR Photography: Friends Don’t Let Friends Make Boring Pictures @ Bjorn3D
- SOLIO Classic Universal Hybrid Solar Charger @ Futurelooks
- Users Demand Upgrade from Vista To XP @ OSWeekly
- Microsoft’s Growing PR Crisis @ OSWeekly
- Apple Snubs Windows? Duh. @ OSWeekly
- MyVu Personal Media Viewer Review @ CoolTechZone
- Hulu to Take Down YouTube @ CoolTechZone
- Dell Could Be A Big Key In Linux Adoption @ MadPenguin
- Apple Mac OS X Leopard Launch Impressions @ Hardware Zone
- iPod Nano 2 Massage Silicone Case from USBFever @ DragonSteelMods
- The Spiral of Technology @ Digit-Life
- Major OSX SMB Issue – Solved? @ HEXUS
- OC3D Competition – DirectX 10 Giveaway
The evolution of a kernel
Phoronix has taken a look back at the 12 most recent major kernel changes to Linux and benchmarks them to see how the changes have effected the speed of the OS. They are planning on extending this series to cover more features and additions to the OS that have been added more recently, like virtualization.