From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 X-Msuck: nntp://news.gmane.io/gmane.emacs.gnus.general/5184 Path: main.gmane.org!not-for-mail From: abraham@dina.kvl.dk (Per Abrahamsen) Newsgroups: gmane.emacs.gnus.general Subject: Re: September Gnus 0.40 is released Date: 21 Feb 1996 12:06:06 +0100 Organization: The Church of Emacs Sender: abraham@dina.kvl.dk Message-ID: References: NNTP-Posting-Host: coloc-standby.netfonds.no X-Trace: main.gmane.org 1035145825 32080 80.91.224.250 (20 Oct 2002 20:30:25 GMT) X-Complaints-To: usenet@main.gmane.org NNTP-Posting-Date: Sun, 20 Oct 2002 20:30:25 +0000 (UTC) Return-Path: ding-request@ifi.uio.no Original-Received: from ifi.uio.no (ifi.uio.no [129.240.64.2]) by deanna.miranova.com (8.7.3/8.6.9) with SMTP id DAA11344 for ; Wed, 21 Feb 1996 03:41:12 -0800 Original-Received: from elc1.dina.kvl.dk (elc1.dina.kvl.dk [130.225.40.228]) by ifi.uio.no with ESMTP (8.6.11/ifi2.4) id for ; Wed, 21 Feb 1996 12:07:52 +0100 Original-Received: from ssv4.dina.kvl.dk (ssv4.dina.kvl.dk [130.225.40.223]) by elc1.dina.kvl.dk (8.6.12/8.6.4) with ESMTP id MAA03666; Wed, 21 Feb 1996 12:02:37 +0100 Original-Received: (abraham@localhost) by ssv4.dina.kvl.dk (8.6.12/8.6.4) id MAA06971; Wed, 21 Feb 1996 12:06:07 +0100 Original-To: ding@ifi.uio.no In-Reply-To: Steven L Baur's message of 20 Feb 1996 19:20:22 -0800 Original-Lines: 23 Xref: main.gmane.org gmane.emacs.gnus.general:5184 X-Report-Spam: http://spam.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.gnus.general:5184 This emacs is reserved for Gnus: PID USERNAME PRI NICE SIZE RES STATE TIME WCPU CPU COMMAND 6037 abraham 23 0 14M 13M sleep 15:42 0.13% 0.13% emacs This emacs is for development (cc-mode, gud, ediff, vc, and compile): PID USERNAME PRI NICE SIZE RES STATE TIME WCPU CPU COMMAND 975 abraham 33 0 11M 8032K sleep 30:36 0.00% 0.00% emacs Just for comparison: PID USERNAME PRI NICE SIZE RES STATE TIME WCPU CPU COMMAND 22473 abraham 34 0 12M 5372K sleep 8:55 0.00% 0.00% netscape The Emacs is an 19.31 pretest. The Netscape is 1.1N. Acceptable? I guess that depends on how much memory you have. My boss thinks that giving developers enough memory helps productivity, so as long as nobody tells him that it just makes us write bloated software, I don't have a problem.